Three-dimensional structure of Escherichia coli RNA polymerase holoenzyme determined by electron crystallography (original) (raw)

Nature volume 340, pages 730–732 (1989)Cite this article

Abstract

DURING transcription in E. coli, the DNA-dependent RNA polymerase locates specific promoter sequences in the DNA template, melts a small region containing the transcription start site, initiates RNA synthesis, processively elongates the transcript, and finally terminates and releases the RNA product. Each step is regulated by interactions between the polymerase, the DNA, the nascent RNA, and a variety of regulatory proteins and ligands1-3. The E. coli enzyme contains a catalytic core of two α-subunits, one β-and one β′-subunit, with relative molecular masses (Mr) of 36,512, 150,619 and 155,162, respectively2. The holoenzyme has an additional regulatory subunit, normally σ-70, of Mr 70,236. Preparations may also contain the ω-subunit (Mr∼10,000), which can be removed without affecting any known properties of the enzyme2. Because the amino-acid sequences of the β- and β′-subunits are homologous to those of the largest subunits of the yeast, Drosophila and murine RNA polymerases4-7, it seems likely that essential features of the three-dimensional structure and catalytic mechanism of RNA polymerase are also conserved across species. Crystals of RNA polymerase suitable for X-ray analysis have not yet been obtained, but two-dimensional crystals of E. coli RNA polymerase holoenzyme can be grown on positively charged lipid layers8. Electron microscopy of these crystals in negative stain shows the enzyme in projection as an irregularly shaped complex ∼100 x 100 x 160 Å in size. We have now determined the three-dimensional structure by electron microscopy of negatively stained, two-dimensional crystals tilted at various angles to the incident electron beam9. We find a structure in RNA polymerase similar to the active-site cleft of DNA polymerase I (ref. 10). In the light of functional similarities between these two enzymes, together with other evidence, this probably identifies the active-site region of RNA polymerase.

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  1. Department of Cell Biology, Beckman Laboratories, Fairchild Center, Stanford University, Stanford, California, 94305, USA
    Seth A. Darst, Elizabeth W. Kubalek & Roger D. Kornberg

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  1. Seth A. Darst
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  2. Elizabeth W. Kubalek
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  3. Roger D. Kornberg
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Darst, S., Kubalek, E. & Kornberg, R. Three-dimensional structure of Escherichia coli RNA polymerase holoenzyme determined by electron crystallography.Nature 340, 730–732 (1989). https://doi.org/10.1038/340730a0

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