Abstract
In this work, using multiple, dissimilar physico-chemical techniques, we demonstrate that the Escherichia coli RNA polymerase core enzyme obtained through a classic purification procedure forms stable (α2ββ'ω)2 complexes in the presence or absence of short DNA probes. Multiple control experiments indicate that this self-association is unlikely to be mediated by RNA polymerase-associated non-protein molecules. We show that the formation of (α2ββ'ω)2 complexes is subject to regulation by known RNA polymerase interactors, such as the auxiliary SWI/SNF subunit of RNA polymerase RapA, as well as NusA and σ70. We also demonstrate that the separation of the core RNA polymerase and RNA polymerase holoenzyme species during Mono Q chromatography is likely due to oligomerization of the core enzyme. We have analyzed the oligomeric state of the polymerase in the presence or absence of DNA, an aspect that was missing from previous studies. Importantly, our work demonstrates that RNA polymerase oligomerization is compatible with DNA binding. Through in vitro transcription and in vivo experiments (utilizing a RapAR599/Q602 mutant lacking transcription-stimulatory function), we demonstrate that the formation of tandem (α2ββ'ω)2–DNA complexes is likely functionally significant and beneficial for the transcriptional activity of the polymerase. Taken together, our findings suggest a novel structural aspect of the E. coli elongation complex. We hypothesize that transcription by tandem RNA polymerase complexes initiated at hypothetical bidirectional “origins of transcription” may explain recurring switches of the direction of transcription in bacterial genomes.
Highlights
In Escherichia coli, the chromosomal DNA is replicated by the DNA polymerase III complex, which contains two copies of the pol III core connected through a single clamp loader complex [1,2]
In this work, using multiple, dissimilar physico-chemical methods, we demonstrate that the E. coli RNA polymerase core enzyme, obtained through a purification procedure similar to that developed by Hager et al [10], forms stable (a2bb’v)2 complexes in the presence or absence of short DNA probes
Due to our interest in the function and mechanism of the RNA polymerase-associated SWI/SNF homolog RapA [11,12,13], we purify Escherichia coli RNA polymerase on a regular basis utilizing a protocol reminiscent of that developed by Hager et al [10] (Figure 1A)
Summary
In Escherichia coli, the chromosomal DNA is replicated by the DNA polymerase III complex, which contains two copies of the pol III core connected through a single clamp loader complex [1,2]. It is thought that a single-copy core RNA polymerase complex consisting of a2bb’v subunits transcribes the same DNA [3]. It appears that the necessity of simultaneous amplification of complementary strands of double-stranded DNA can justify the existence of tandem replication complexes in the case of DNA polymerase; this rationale is lacking in the case of RNA polymerase, which utilizes only one DNA strand as a template. The question of whether DNA-bound RNA polymerase can self-associate (which is important for understanding the possible functional implications of such self-association), to the best of our knowledge, has not been addressed in any of the existing studies
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