TFIIS Is Crucial During Early Transcript Elongation for Transcriptional Reprogramming in Response to Heat Stress.
In addition to the stage of transcriptional initiation, the production of mRNAs is regulated during elongation. Accordingly, the synthesis of mRNAs by RNA polymerase II (RNAPII) in the chromatin context is modulated by various transcript elongation factors. TFIIS is an elongation factor that stimulates the transcript cleavage activity of RNAPII to reactivate stalled elongation complexes at barriers to transcription including nucleosomes. Since Arabidopsis tfIIs mutants grow normally under standard conditions, we have exposed them to heat stress (HS), revealing that tfIIs plants are highly sensitive to elevated temperatures. Transcriptomic analyses demonstrate that particularly HS-induced genes are expressed at lower levels in tfIIs than in wildtype. Mapping the distribution of elongating RNAPII uncovered that in tfIIs plants RNAPII accumulates at the +1 nucleosome of genes that are upregulated upon HS. The promoter-proximal RNAPII accumulation in tfIIs under HS conditions conforms to that observed upon inhibition of the RNAPII transcript cleavage activity. Further analysis of the RNAPII accumulation downstream of transcriptional start sites illustrated that RNAPII stalling occurs at +1 nucleosomes that are depleted in the histone variant H2A.Z upon HS. Therefore, assistance of early transcript elongation by TFIIS is required for reprogramming gene expression to establish plant thermotolerance.