Structural basis of asymmetric transcription through a composite nucleosome formed by a hexasome and an octasome

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Abstract

The overlapping dinucleosome (OLDN), a composite chromatin particle consisting of a hexasome and a canonical octasome, forms immediately downstream of transcription start sites, likely through chromatin remodeling activity, and has been proposed to act as a transient regulatory intermediate during transcription. However, how RNA polymerase II (RNAPII) engages with and transcribes through this unusual structure remains unclear. Here, we reconstituted OLDNs in vitro and performed transcription assays with RNAPII. We found that transcription efficiency was markedly higher when RNAPII initiated from the hexasome side than from the octasome side. Cryo-electron microscopy further revealed that transcription from the hexasome side induced pronounced conformational rearrangements, in which RNAPII progression dramatically opened the hexasome-octasome interface. These results uncover the mechanism by which RNAPII senses the intrinsic transcriptional polarity of OLDNs and suggest that OLDNs function as dynamic, directionally sensitive regulators of transcription elongation.

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