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John T. Lis

Researcher at Cornell University

Publications -  295
Citations -  34849

John T. Lis is an academic researcher from Cornell University. The author has contributed to research in topics: RNA polymerase II & Transcription (biology). The author has an hindex of 98, co-authored 281 publications receiving 31783 citations. Previous affiliations of John T. Lis include Washington University in St. Louis & State University of New York System.

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Nascent RNA Sequencing Reveals Widespread Pausing and Divergent Initiation at Human Promoters

TL;DR: Global run-on sequencing, GRO-seq, shows that peaks of promoter-proximal polymerase reside on ∼30% of human genes, transcription extends beyond pre-messenger RNA 3′ cleavage, and antisense transcription is prevalent.
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Promoter-proximal pausing of RNA polymerase II: emerging roles in metazoans

TL;DR: The evidence for pausing of Pol II from recent high-throughput studies will be discussed, as well as the potential interconnected functions of promoter-proximally paused Pol II.
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Getting up to speed with transcription elongation by RNA polymerase II

TL;DR: Elongation is recognized as a key phase in the regulation of transcription by Pol II, revealing that elongation is a highly complex process.
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Precise Maps of RNA Polymerase Reveal How Promoters Direct Initiation and Pausing

TL;DR: A precision nuclear run-on and sequencing assay to map the genome-wide distribution of transcriptionally engaged Pol II at base pair resolution and shows how the promoter dictates transcriptional pausing and detects the preferential localization of active transcription complexes within the genome.
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The RNA polymerase II molecule at the 5′ end of the uninduced hsp70 gene of D. melanogaster is transcriptionally engaged

TL;DR: It is shown that a promoter-associated RNA polymerase II molecule is transcriptionally engaged and has formed a nascent RNA chain, but is apparently arrested at that point and unable to penetrate further into the hsp70 gene without heat induction.