Transcription of eukaryotic protein-coding genes

TI Lee, RA Young - Annual review of genetics, 2000 - annualreviews.org
TI Lee, RA Young
Annual review of genetics, 2000annualreviews.org
▪ Abstract The past decade has seen an explosive increase in information about regulation
of eukaryotic gene transcription, especially for protein-coding genes. The most striking
advances in our knowledge of transcriptional regulation involve the chromatin template, the
large complexes recruited by transcriptional activators that regulate chromatin structure and
the transcription apparatus, the holoenzyme forms of RNA polymerase II involved in initiation
and elongation, and the mechanisms that link mRNA processing with its synthesis. We …
Abstract
The past decade has seen an explosive increase in information about regulation of eukaryotic gene transcription, especially for protein-coding genes. The most striking advances in our knowledge of transcriptional regulation involve the chromatin template, the large complexes recruited by transcriptional activators that regulate chromatin structure and the transcription apparatus, the holoenzyme forms of RNA polymerase II involved in initiation and elongation, and the mechanisms that link mRNA processing with its synthesis. We describe here the major advances in these areas, with particular emphasis on the modular complexes associated with RNA polymerase II that are targeted by activators and other regulators of mRNA biosynthesis.
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