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Query: EC:2.7.7.6 (
RNA polymerase
)
34,946
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Rpb4 and Rpb7 are two yeast
RNA polymerase II
(Pol II) subunits whose mechanistic roles have recently started to be deciphered. Although previous data suggest that Rpb7 can stably interact with Pol II only as a heterodimer with Rpb4, RPB7 is essential for viability, whereas RPB4 is essential only during some stress conditions. To resolve this discrepancy and to gain a better understanding of the mode of action of Rpb4, we took advantage of the inability of cells lacking RPB4 (rpb4Delta, containing Pol IIDelta4) to grow above 30 degrees C and screened for genes whose overexpression could suppress this defect. We thus discovered that overexpression of RPB7 could suppress the inability of rpb4Delta cells to grow at 34 degrees C (a relatively mild temperature stress) but not at higher temperatures. Overexpression of RPB7 could also partially suppress the
cold
sensitivity of rpb4Delta strains and fully suppress their inability to survive a long starvation period (stationary phase). Notably, however, overexpression of RPB4 could not override the requirement for RPB7. Consistent with the growth phenotype, overexpression of RPB7 could suppress the transcriptional defect characteristic of rpb4Delta cells during the mild, but not during a more severe, heat shock. We also demonstrated, through two reciprocal coimmunoprecipitation experiments, a stable interaction of the overproduced Rpb7 with Pol IIDelta4. Nevertheless, fewer Rpb7 molecules interacted with Pol IIDelta4 than with wild-type Pol II. Thus, a major role of Rpb4 is to augment the interaction of Rpb7 with Pol II. We suggest that Pol IIDelta4 contains a small amount of Rpb7 that is sufficient to support transcription only under nonstress conditions. When RPB7 is overexpressed, more Rpb7 assembles with Pol IIDelta4, enough to permit appropriate transcription also under some stress conditions.
...
PMID:Rpb7 can interact with RNA polymerase II and support transcription during some stresses independently of Rpb4. 1008 33
The original model of repression of transcription initiation is steric interference of
RNA polymerase
binding to a promoter by its repressor protein bound to a DNA site that overlaps the promoter. From the results described here, we propose two other mechanisms of repressor action, both of which involve formation of higher-order DNA-multiprotein complexes. These models also explain the problem of
RNA polymerase
gaining access to a promoter in the condensed nucleoid in response to an inducing signal to initiate transcription.
Cold
Spring Harb Symp Quant Biol 1998
PMID:Transcription regulation by repressosome and by RNA polymerase contact. 1038 65
A
DNA-dependent RNA polymerase
was purified from the Antarctic psychrotrophic bacterium Pseudomonas syringae. The
RNA polymerase
showed a typical eubacterial subunit composition with beta, beta', alpha2 and sigma subunits. The subunits cross-reacted with antibodies raised against holoenzyme and the individual subunits of the
RNA polymerase
of Escherichia coli. However, the enzyme was considered unique, since unlike the
RNA polymerase
of mesophilic E. coli it exhibited significant and consistent transcriptional activity (10-15%) even at 0 degrees C. But, similar to the enzyme from the mesophilic bacterium, the
RNA polymerase
from P. syringae exhibited optimum activity at 37 degrees C. The study also demonstrates that the
RNA polymerase
of P. syringae could preferentially transcribe the
cold
-inducible gene cspA of E. coli only at lower temperatures (0-22 degrees C). The polymerase was also observed to be relatively more rifampicin-resistant during transcription at lower temperature.
...
PMID:A RNA polymerase with transcriptional activity at 0 degrees C from the Antarctic bacterium Pseudomonas syringae. 1040 67
Mutation of glutamate 62 to lysine in yeast transcription factor (TF) IIB (Sua7) causes a
cold
-sensitive phenotype. This mutant also leads to preferential transcription of downstream start sites on some promoters in vivo. To explore the molecular nature of these phenotypes, the TFIIB E62K mutant was characterized in vitro. The mutant interacts with TATA-binding protein normally. In three different assays, the mutant can also interact with
RNA polymerase II
and recruit it and the other basal transcription factors to a promoter. Despite the ability to assemble a transcription complex, the TFIIB E62K protein is severely defective in transcription in vitro. Therefore, the role of TFIIB must be more than simply bridging TATA-binding protein and polymerase at the promoter. We propose that the region around Glu-62 in yeast TFIIB plays a role in start site selection, perhaps mediating a conformational change in the polymerase or the DNA during the search for initiation sites. This step may be related to the yeast-specific spacing between TATA elements and start sites since mutations of the corresponding glutamate in mammalian TFIIB do not produce a similar effect.
...
PMID:Evidence that transcription factor IIB is required for a post-assembly step in transcription initiation. 1046 20
"Bacteria have evolved adaptive networks to face the challenges of changing environments and to survive under conditions of stress. Therefore, the efficiencies of inactivation and preservation methods need to be assessed, especially with regard to the enormous potential of food pathogens to adapt to a wide variety of stress conditions. All adaptive responses, whether to changing nutrients or to various stresses encountered in minimal processing, involve a series of genetic switches that control the metabolic changes taking place. A common regulatory mechanism involves the modification of sigma (sigma) factors whose primary role is to bind to core
RNA polymerase
conferring promoter specificity directing expression of specialty regulons involved in heat-shock response, the chemotactic response, sporulation, and general stress response. Examples of the latter regulon in Gram-positive bacteria (the sigmaB regulon) and in Gram-negative bacteria (the RpoS regulon) will be discussed in more detail. Cellular adaptive mechanisms to starvation,
cold
shock, heat shock, (weak) acids, high osmolarity and high hydrostatic pressure will be described and their significance in food preservation and safety will be discussed."
...
PMID:Microbial stress response in minimal processing. 1048 45
Subunit 3 (Rpb3) of eukaryotic
RNA polymerase II
is a homologue of the alpha subunit of prokaryotic
RNA polymerase
, which plays a key role in subunit assembly of this complex enzyme by providing the contact surfaces for both beta and beta' subunits. Previously we demonstrated that the Schizosaccharomyces pombe Rpb3 protein forms a core subassembly together with Rpb2 (the beta homologue) and Rpb11 (the second alpha homologue) subunits, as in the case of the prokaryotic alpha2beta complex. In order to obtain further insight into the physiological role(s) of Rpb3, we subjected the S. pombe rpb3 gene to mutagenesis. A total of nine temperature-sensitive (Ts) and three
cold
-sensitive (Cs) S. pombe mutants have been isolated, each (with the exception of one double mutant) carrying a single mutation in the rpb3 gene in one of the four regions (A D) that are conserved between the homologues of eukaryotic subunit 3. The three Cs mutations were all located in region A, in agreement with the central role of the corresponding region in the assembly of prokaryotic
RNA polymerase
; the Ts mutations, in contrast, were found in all four regions. Growth of the Ts mutants was reduced to various extents at non-permissive temperatures. Since the metabolic stability of most Ts mutant Rpb3 proteins was markedly reduced at non-permissive temperature, we predict that these mutant Rpb3 proteins are defective in polymerase assembly or the mutant RNA polymerases containing mutant Rpb3 subunits are unstable. In accordance with this prediction, the Ts phenotype of all the mutants was suppressed to varying extents by overexpression of Rpb11, the pairing partner of Rpb3 in the core subassembly. We conclude that the majority of rpb3 mutations affect the assembly of Rpb3, even though their effects on subunit assembly vary depending on the location of the mutation considered.
...
PMID:Isolation and characterization of temperature-sensitive mutations in the gene (rpb3) for subunit 3 of RNA polymerase II in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. 1050 38
As an approach to elucidating the rules governing the assembly of human
RNA polymerase II
(hRPB), interactions between its subunits have been systematically analyzed. Eleven of the 12 expected hRPB subunits have previously been tested for reciprocal interactions (J. Biol. Chem. 272 (1997) 16815-16821). We now report the results obtained for the last subunit (hRPB4; Mol. Cell. Biol. 18 (1998) 1935-1945) and propose an essentially complete picture of the potential interactions occurring within hRPB. Finally, complementation experiments in yeast indicated that hRPB4 expression efficiently cured both heat and
cold
-sensitivity of RPB4-lacking strains, supporting the existence of conserved functional subunit interactions.
...
PMID:Interactions between the full complement of human RNA polymerase II subunits. 1056 6
Negative cofactor 2 (NC2) is a dimeric histone-fold complex that represses
RNA polymerase II
transcription through binding to TATA-box-binding protein (TBP) and inhibition of the general transcription factors TFIIA and TFIIB. Here we study molecular mechanisms of repression by human NC2 in vivo in yeast. Yeast NC2 genes are essential and can be exchanged with human NC2. The physiologically relevant regions of NC2 have been determined and shown to match the histone-fold dimerization motif. A suppressor screen based upon limiting concentrations of NC2beta yielded a
cold
-sensitive mutant in the yeast TFIIA subunit Toa1. The single point mutation in Toa1 alleviates the requirement for both subunits of NC2. Biochemical characterization indicated that mutant (mt)-Toa1 dimerizes well with Toa2; it supports specific recognition of the TATA box by TBP but forms less stable TBP-TFIIA-DNA complexes. Wild-type but not the mt-Toa1 can relieve NC2 effects in purified transcription systems. These data provide evidence for a dimeric NC2 complex that is in an equilibrium with TFIIA after the initial binding of TBP to promoter TATA boxes.
...
PMID:A single point mutation in TFIIA suppresses NC2 requirement in vivo. 1067 36
A 1349 nucleotide fragment of the RNA2 from a nodavirus affecting Atlantic halibut Hippoglossus hippoglossus was characterised and the nuclotide sequence (accession no. AJ245641) was employed to develop an optimal reverse-
transcriptase
polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) detection assay. The sequenced part of the RNA2 of Atlantic halibut nodavirus (strain AH95NorA) was highly similar in organisation to that of the RNA2 of striped jack nervous necrosis virus (SJNNV), and comprised features common to all nodaviruses. These characteristics confirmed that the virus that causes viral encephalopathy and retinopathy (VER) in Atlantic halibut is a nodavirus. The nucleotide sequence of the 1349 nucleotide fragment of Atlantic halibut nodavirus RNA2 was 80% identical to the RNA2 of SJNNV. The T2 region (830 nucleotides) of the RNA2 of Atlantic halibut nodavirus shared 98% of the nucleotide sequence when compared with the homologous region of barfin flounder nervous necrosis virus (BFNNV), while the nucleotide sequence identity to SJNNV in this region was 76%. Phylogenetic analysis based on the nucleotide sequences of the T4 region (421 nucleotides) of Atlantic halibut nodavirus and of other fish nodaviruses revealed a close relationship to the nodaviruses of the barfin flounder clad that have been found in other
cold
-water species (Pacific cod Gadus macrocephalus and barfin founder Verasper moseri). The nucleotide sequence of the RNA2 of Atlantic halibut nodavirus included some features that differ from that of SJNNV. The ORF of the RNA2 of Atlantic halibut nodavirus lacked 6 nucleotides through a single deletion and a 5-nucleotide deletion, separated by 4 nucleotides. The 3'-non-encoding region contained a 21 nucleotide insert and a 3 nucleotide deletion when compared with SJNNV. In comparison with the RNA2 of SJNNV, the 3'-non-encoding region showed a nucleotide sequence identity of 84.5%. A primer set based on the Atlantic halibut nodavirus nucleotide sequence was employed in order to design an optimal RT-PCR. The detection limit of the PCR was 10 to 100 copies of plasmid, while the detection limit of the RT-PCR assay was 100 to 1000 copies of in vitro transcribed viral RNA.
...
PMID:Characterization of the capsid protein gene from a nodavirus strain affecting the Atlantic halibut Hippoglossus hippoglossus and design of an optimal reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) detection assay. 1071 13
Formation of an initiation-competent
RNA polymerase
-promoter complex involves DNA melting over a region of about 12 base-pairs, which includes the start site of transcription, thus enabling the template strand to base-pair with the initiating nucleoside triphosphates. By studying the effects of alanine substitutions, we have investigated the role of the aromatic amino residues in the Escherichia coli sigma(70) conserved region 2.3 in promoter strand separation. The resulting mutants were assessed for their activity in vivo in the context of a sigma(70)/sigma(32) hybrid sigma factor that could be targeted to a specific hybrid promoter in the cell. All substitutions lead to an at least twofold reduction in expression of the hybrid promoter-driven reporter gene. The in vitro assay of single substitutions indicated
cold
sensitivity similar to that previously observed with analogous substitutions in Bacillus subtilis sigma(A). Kinetic assays showed that these substitutions slowed the rate of open complex formation at 37 degrees C as well.
RNA polymerase
reconstituted with a sigma(70) containing multiple alanine substitutions readily binds to promoter DNA, but then proceeds slowly beyond the first intermediate complex on the pathway to formation of the transcription-competent complex. These data demonstrate that together the aromatic residues in region 2.3 of E. coli sigma(70) ensure that DNA strand separation proceeds efficiently, even if no individual residue may be essential for accomplishment of the process.
...
PMID:Aromatic amino acids in region 2.3 of Escherichia coli sigma 70 participate collectively in the formation of an RNA polymerase-promoter open complex. 1087 47
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