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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)
The antibacterial peptide microcin J25 (MccJ25) inhibits transcription by bacterial
RNA polymerase
(RNAP). Biochemical results indicate that inhibition of transcription occurs at the level of
NTP
uptake or
NTP
binding by RNAP. Genetic results indicate that inhibition of transcription requires an extensive determinant, comprising more than 50 amino acid residues, within the RNAP secondary channel (also known as the "NTP-uptake channel" or "pore"). Biophysical results indicate that inhibition of transcription involves binding of MccJ25 within the RNAP secondary channel. Molecular modeling indicates that binding of MccJ25 within the RNAP secondary channel obstructs the RNAP secondary channel. We conclude that MccJ25 inhibits transcription by binding within and obstructing the RNAP secondary channel--acting essentially as a "cork in a bottle." Obstruction of the RNAP secondary channel represents an attractive target for drug discovery.
...
PMID:Antibacterial peptide microcin J25 inhibits transcription by binding within and obstructing the RNA polymerase secondary channel. 1520 Sep 52
21 amino acid peptide Microcin J25 (MccJ25) inhibits transcription by bacterial
RNA polymerase
(RNAP). MccJ25-resistance mutations cluster in the RNAP secondary channel through which incoming
NTP
substrates are thought to reach the catalytic center and the 3' end of the nascent RNA is likely to thread in backtracked transcription complexes. The secondary channel also accepts transcript cleavage factors GreA and GreB. Here, we demonstrate that MccJ25 inhibits GreA/GreB-dependent transcript cleavage, impedes formation of backtracked complexes, and can be crosslinked to the 3'-end of the nascent RNA in elongation complexes. These results place the MccJ25 binding site within the secondary channel. Moreover, single-molecule assays reveal that MccJ25 binding to a transcribing RNAP temporarily stops transcript elongation but has no effect on the elongation velocity between pauses. Kinetic analysis of single-molecule data allows us to put forward a model of transcription inhibition by MccJ25 that envisions the complete occlusion of the secondary channel by bound inhibitor.
...
PMID:Molecular mechanism of transcription inhibition by peptide antibiotic Microcin J25. 1520 Sep 53
Poty- and picornaviruses share similar genome organizations and polyprotein processing strategies. By analogy to picornaviruses it has been proposed that the genome-linked protein VPg may serve as a primer for genome replication of potyviruses. The multifunctional VPg of potato virus A (PVA; genus Potyvirus) was found to be uridylylated by NIb, the
RNA polymerase
of PVA. The nucleotidylation activity of NIb is more efficient in the presence of Mn(2+) than Mg(2+) and does not require an RNA template. Our results suggest that the nucleotidylation reaction exhibits weak preference for UTP over the other NTPs. An
NTP
-binding experiment with oxidized [alpha-(32)P]UTP revealed that PVA VPg contains an
NTP
-binding site. Deletion of a 7-amino acid-long putative
NTP
-binding site from VPg reduced nucleotide-binding capacity and debilitated uridylylation reaction. These results provide evidence that VPg may play a similar role in RNA synthesis of potyviruses as it does in the case of picornaviruses.
...
PMID:Uridylylation of the potyvirus VPg by viral replicase NIb correlates with the nucleotide binding capacity of VPg. 1521 30
Several DNA/RNA sequencing strategies have been developed using matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI-MS). In the reverse Sanger sequencing approach alpha-thiophosphate-containing NTPs are employed. Sequencing ladders are produced by the subsequent exonuclease cleavage, which is inhibited by the alpha-S-
NTP
at the 3' terminus. Here the reverse Sanger sequencing of RNA is described. The stability of RNA during the UV-MALDI process is higher relative to DNA, and RNA can be easily synthesized by transcription using bacteriophage
RNA polymerase
. alpha-S-rNTP was added to the reaction in a ratio of 1:3 to the native rNTPs and was incorporated statistically by the
RNA polymerase
. Four separate sequence ladders were produced, to avoid the problem of the only 1u mass difference between uridine and cytidine. However, it was shown that RNA transcription does not produce homogeneous transcripts. Therefore isolation of the full-length transcript is required to attain a non-ambiguous interpretation of cleavage spectra. This is achieved by the exclusive immobilization of the full-length transcript on a solid phase. The full-length transcripts were hybridized to magnetic beads, coated with short universal sequences, complementary to the in vitro RNA. After purification and isolation the RNA full-length transcript is cleaved by snake venom phosphodiesterase (SVP) and the obtained sequence ladder is analyzed by MALDI-MS.
...
PMID:Reverse Sanger sequencing of RNA by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry after solid phase purification. 1524 Aug 35
Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) transcription is regulated primarily at the level of initiation from rRNA promoters. The unusual kinetic properties of these promoters result in their specific regulation by two small molecule signals, ppGpp and the initiating
NTP
, that bind to
RNA polymerase
(RNAP) at all promoters. We show here that DksA, a protein previously unsuspected as a transcription factor, is absolutely required for rRNA regulation. In deltadksA mutants, rRNA promoters are unresponsive to changes in amino acid availability, growth rate, or growth phase. In vitro, DksA binds to RNAP, reduces open complex lifetime, inhibits rRNA promoter activity, and amplifies effects of ppGpp and the initiating
NTP
on rRNA transcription, explaining the dksA requirement in vivo. These results expand our molecular understanding of rRNA transcription regulation, may explain previously described pleiotropic effects of dksA, and illustrate how transcription factors that do not bind DNA can nevertheless potentiate RNAP for regulation.
...
PMID:DksA: a critical component of the transcription initiation machinery that potentiates the regulation of rRNA promoters by ppGpp and the initiating NTP. 1529 57
The mechanism for elongation catalyzed by human
RNA polymerase II
(RNAP II) has been analyzed using millisecond phase transient state kinetics. Here, we apply a running start, two-bond, double-quench protocol. Quenching the reaction with EDTA indicates
NTP
loading into the active site followed by rapid isomerization. HCl quenching defines the time of phosphodiester bond formation. Model-independent and global kinetic analyses were applied to simulate the RNAP II mechanism for forward elongation through the synthesis of two specific phosphodiester bonds, modeling rate data collected over a wide range of nucleoside triphosphate concentrations. We report adequate two-bond kinetic simulations for the reaction in the presence of TFIIF alone and in the presence of TFIIF+TFIIS, providing detailed insight into the RNAP II mechanism and into processive RNA synthesis. RNAP II extends an RNA chain through a substrate induced-fit mechanism, termed
NTP
-driven translocation. After rapid isomerization, chemistry is delayed. At a stall point induced by withholding the next templated
NTP
, RNAP II fractionates into at least two active and one paused conformation, revealed as different forward rates of elongation. In the presence of TFIIF alone or in the presence of TFIIF+TFIIS, rapid rates are very similar; although, with TFIIF alone the complex is more highly poised for forward synthesis. Based on steady-state analysis, TFIIF was thought to suppress transcriptional pausing, but this view is misleading. TFIIF supports elongation and suppresses pausing by stabilizing the post-translocated elongation complex. When TFIIS is present, RNA cleavage and transcriptional restart pathways are supported, but TFIIS has a role in suppression of transient pausing, which is the most important contribution of TFIIS to elongation from a stall position.
...
PMID:Transcription factors IIF and IIS and nucleoside triphosphate substrates as dynamic probes of the human RNA polymerase II mechanism. 1535 37
Expression of the Escherichia coli nucleoid-associated protein Fis (factor for inversion stimulation) is controlled at the transcriptional level in accordance with the nutritional availability. It is highly expressed during early logarithmic growth phase in cells growing in rich medium but poorly expressed in late logarithmic and stationary phase. However, fis mRNA expression is prolonged at high levels throughout the logarithmic and early stationary phase when the preferred transcription initiation site (+1C) is replaced with A or G, indicating that initiation with CTP is a required component of the regulation pattern. We show that
RNA polymerase
-fis promoter complexes are short lived and that transcription is stimulated over 20-fold from linear or supercoiled DNA if CTP is present during formation of initiation complexes, which serves to stabilize these complexes. Use of fis promoter fusions to lacZ indicated that fis promoter transcription is sensitive to the intracellular pool of the predominant initiating
NTP
. Growth conditions resulting in increases in CTP pools also result in corresponding increases in fis mRNA levels. Measurements of
NTP
pools performed throughout the growth of the bacterial culture in rich medium revealed a dramatic increase in all four
NTP
levels during the transition from stationary to logarithmic growth phase, followed by reproducible oscillations in their levels during logarithmic growth, which later decrease during the transition from logarithmic to stationary phase. In particular, CTP pools fluctuate in a manner consistent with a role in regulating fis expression. These observations support a model whereby fis expression is subject to regulation by the availability of its initiating
NTP
.
...
PMID:The Escherichia coli Fis promoter is regulated by changes in the levels of its transcription initiation nucleotide CTP. 1538 61
As an approach to the study of rRNA synthesis in Gram-positive bacteria, we characterized the regulation of the Bacillus subtilis rrnB and rrnO rRNA promoters. We conclude that B. subtilis and Escherichia coli use different strategies to control rRNA synthesis. In contrast to E. coli, it appears that the initiating
NTP
for transcription from B. subtilis rRNA promoters is GTP, promoter strength is determined primarily by the core promoter (-10/-35 region), and changes in promoter activity always correlate with changes in the intracellular GTP concentration. rRNA promoters in B. subtilis appear to be regulated by changes in the initiating
NTP
pools, but in some growth transitions, changes in rRNA promoter activity are also dependent on relA, which codes for ppGpp synthetase. In contrast to the situation for E. coli where ppGpp decreases rRNA promoter activity by directly inhibiting
RNA polymerase
, it appears that ppGpp may not inhibit B. subtilis
RNA polymerase
directly. Rather, increases in the ppGpp concentration might reduce the available GTP pools, thereby modulating rRNA promoter activity indirectly.
...
PMID:An alternative strategy for bacterial ribosome synthesis: Bacillus subtilis rRNA transcription regulation. 1549 87
We present a kinetic model for the sequence-dependent motion of
RNA polymerase
(RNAP) during transcription elongation. For each
NTP
incorporation, RNAP has a net forward translocation of one base-pair along the DNA template. However, this process may involve the exploration of back-tracked and forward-tracked translocation modes. In our model, the kinetic rates for the reaction pathway, calculated based on the stabilities of the transcription elongation complex (TEC), necessarily lead to sequence-dependent
NTP
incorporation rates. Simulated RNAP elongation kinetics is in good agreement with data from transcription gels and single-molecule studies. The model provides a kinetic explanation for well-known back-tracked pauses at transcript positions with unstable TECs. It also predicts a new type of pause caused by an energetically unfavorable transition from pre to post-translocation modes.
...
PMID:Sequence-dependent kinetic model for transcription elongation by RNA polymerase. 1552 89
Ribosomal RNA transcription is the rate-limiting step in ribosome synthesis in bacteria and has been investigated intensely for over half a century. Multiple mechanisms ensure that rRNA synthesis rates are appropriate for the cell's particular growth condition. Recently, important advances have been made in our understanding of rRNA transcription initiation in Escherichia coli. These include (a) a model at the atomic level of the network of protein-DNA and protein-protein interactions that recruit
RNA polymerase
to rRNA promoters, accounting for their extraordinary strength; (b) discovery of the nonredundant roles of two small molecule effectors, ppGpp and the initiating
NTP
, in regulation of rRNA transcription initiation; and (c) identification of a new component of the transcription machinery, DksA, that is absolutely required for regulation of rRNA promoter activity. Together, these advances provide clues important for our molecular understanding not only of rRNA transcription, but also of transcription in general.
...
PMID:rRNA transcription in Escherichia coli. 1556 92
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