Abstract
We examined the relative affinity of model promoter constructs for binding Escherichia coli RNA polymerase (RNAP) holoenzyme. Model promoter constructs were designed to mimic DNA structures characteristic for different steps of transcription initiation. DNA duplexes in which a chemical cross-link was introduced just downstream from -10 hexamer to prevent DNA melting upon RNAP binding were used to mimic RNAP-promoter contacts in a closed complex. Fork junction DNA molecules with double-stranded/single-stranded junction between -11 and -10 position were used to study interactions of RNA polymerase with DNA in open complex. The -35 and -10 promoter regions were found to be equally important for the initial RNAP binding. The recognition of -35 promoter region was independent of structural context of the model promoter fragment. In contrast, free energy of RNAP binding to -10 hexamer was highly dependent on DNA structure. The relative importance of -10 region for sequence-specific interaction with the polymerase was the lowest for constructs mimicking closed complex and the highest for the constructs mimicking open complex. The relative importance of region -10 was also dependent on the presence of -35 consensus element indicating a communication between different DNA binding determinants of polymerase during open complex formation. Short double-stranded promoter fragments comprising only -35 and -10 or only -10 consensus elements underwent melting in a complex with polymerase indicating that the core of promoter melting activity of the polymerase is localized to a very small subset of all promoter-polymerase contacts.
Highlights
Tion as it displays strong but unspecific DNA binding activity [1,2,3]
Region Ϫ35 remains double-stranded throughout transcription initiation, but the mode of its recognition can potentially change upon open complex formation when DNA is wrapped around RNA polymerase (RNAP) and distorted from the normal linear trajectory [26]
Similar affinities obtained in the luminescence resonance energy transfer (LRET) assay and Electrophoretic Mobility Shift Assay (EMSA) assay indicated proper method-independent behavior of our constructs
Summary
Tion as it displays strong but unspecific DNA binding activity [1,2,3]. Promoter recognition and transcription initiation requires binding of factor to the core enzyme. Studies of the effect of base mutations in the fork junction DNA on the sensitivity of polymerase-DNA complexes to heparin challenge suggested an important role of specific polymerase-consensus Ϫ10 region interactions in promoting functionally important enzyme isomerization [18].
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