IGS38, a lncRNA from the human rDNA intergenic spacer, regulates rRNA transcription by altering rDNA chromatin organisation and activating the transcription machinery

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Abstract

The eukaryotic ribosomal genes are multi-copy genes, transcribed from the rDNA, and approximately one third of them is actively transcribed in differentiated cells. A number of lncRNAs have been identified from the intergenic spacer between the rRNA genes, among those the spacer RNA and PAPAS that are involved silencing of rRNA gene copies by altering the chromatin configuration. Here, we have identified lncRNAs that are transcribed from the human rDNA loci and modulate the loci; IGS38 positively regulates rRNA gene transcription by associating to the 47S rRNA gene promoter and modulating the rRNA promoter accessibility while IGS32as associates with heterochromatin. IGS38 binds to the 47S gene promoter through the RNA pol I factors TAF1C and RRN3 as well as the Williams Syndrome Transcription Factor (WSTF), a component of the B-WICH chromatin remodelling complex. The increased accessibility of the promoter stabilises the architectural protein Upstream Binding Factor (UBF) at the rRNA promoter, thereby facilitating RNA pol I promoter escape. Furthermore, IGS38 knock down displays and increased dsRNA abundance in the cytoplasm with a weak induction of the dsRNA sensor OAS2, typically induced by interferon and viral dsRNA. Overall, the both IGS38 and IGS32as are chromatin associated lncRNAs involved in rDNA chromatin changes, and IGS38 is stimulating, together with WSTF, rRNA gene transcription in human cells. Graphical abstract IGS stabilises 47S rRNA transcription, disruption of IGS38 expression leads to the release of dsRNA in the cytoplasm and a weak immune activation of OAS2. Created by biorender ( https://biorender.com/shortURL )

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europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00