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The effects of upstream DNA on open complex formation by Escherichia coli RNA polymerase

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TLDR
It is proposed that early wrapping interactions between upstream DNA and the polymerase exterior strongly affect the events that control entry and subsequent unwinding of the DNA start site in the jaws of polymerase.
Abstract
Binding of activators to upstream DNA sequences regulates transcription initiation by affecting the stability of the initial RNA polymerase (RNAP)–promoter complex and/or the rate of subsequent conformational changes required to form the open complex (RPO). Here we observe that the presence of nonspecific upstream DNA profoundly affects an early step in formation of the transcription bubble. Kinetic studies with the λPR promoter and Escherichia coli RNAP reveal that the presence of DNA upstream of base pair -47 greatly increases the rate of forming RPO, without significantly affecting its rate of dissociation. We find that this increase is largely due to an acceleration of the rate-limiting step (isomerization) in RPO formation, a step that occurs after polymerase binds. Footprinting experiments reveal striking structural differences downstream of the transcription start site (+1) in the first kinetically significant intermediate when upstream DNA is present. On the template strand, the DNase I downstream boundary of this early intermediate is +20 when upstream DNA is present but is shortened by approximately two helical turns when upstream DNA beyond -47 is removed. KMnO4 footprinting reveals an identical initiation bubble (-11 to +2), but unusual reactivity of template strand upstream cytosines (-12, -14, and -15) on the truncated promoter. Based on this work, we propose that early wrapping interactions between upstream DNA and the polymerase exterior strongly affect the events that control entry and subsequent unwinding of the DNA start site in the jaws of polymerase.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Advances in bacterial promoter recognition and its control by factors that do not bind DNA.

TL;DR: The picture of promoter control has evolved beyond one in which regulation results solely from activators and repressors that bind to DNA sequences near the RNAP binding site: many important transcription factors bind directly to RNAP without binding to DNA.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanism of Bacterial Transcription Initiation: RNA Polymerase - Promoter Binding, Isomerization to Initiation-Competent Open Complexes, and Initiation of RNA Synthesis

TL;DR: The transcription initiation factor, σ(70), plays critical roles in promoter recognition and RP(o) formation as well as in early steps of RNA synthesis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Initial events in bacterial transcription initiation.

TL;DR: The series of large conformational changes set in motion by initial specific binding of bacterial RNA polymerase (RNAP) to promoter DNA and their relevance for regulation are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transcription initiation by mix and match elements: flexibility for polymerase binding to bacterial promoters

TL;DR: It is suggested that considering promoter elements according to their involvement in early ( polymerase binding) or later (polymerase isomerization) steps in transcription initiation rather than simply from their match to conventional promoter consensus sequences is a more instructive form of promoter classification.
Journal ArticleDOI

Real-time characterization of intermediates in the pathway to open complex formation by Escherichia coli RNA polymerase at the T7A1 promoter

TL;DR: Time-resolved x-ray-generated hydroxyl radical footprinting is used to directly characterize, at single-nucleotide resolution, several intermediates in the pathway to open complex formation by Escherichia coli RNA polymerase on the T7A1 promoter at 37 degrees C.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Crystal structure of a CAP-DNA complex: the DNA is bent by 90 degrees.

TL;DR: The 3 angstrom resolution crystal structure of the Escherichia coli catabolite gene activator protein (CAP) complexed with a 30-base pair DNA sequence shows that the DNA is bent by 90 degrees.
Journal ArticleDOI

A procedure for the rapid, large-scall purification of Escherichia coli DNA-dependent RNA polymerase involving Polymin P precipitation and DNA-cellulose chromatography.

TL;DR: An improved method is described for the purification of the DNA-dependent RNA polymerase from Escherichia coli, resulting in a yield of 250 mg of holoenzyme from 500 g of cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

A third recognition element in bacterial promoters: DNA binding by the alpha subunit of RNA polymerase

TL;DR: Results suggest that UP elements comprise a third promoter recognition region (in addition to the -10, -35 recognition hexamers, which interact with the sigma subunit) and may account for the presence of (A+T)-rich DNA upstream of many prokaryotic promoters.
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