Abstract
According to the prerecruitment hypothesis, Escherichia coli SoxS activates the transcription of the genes of the SoxRS regulon by forming binary complexes with RNA polymerase (RNAP) that scan the chromosome for class I and class II SoxS-dependent promoters. We showed previously that the α subunit's C-terminal domain plays a role in activating both classes of promoter by making protein–protein contacts with SoxS; some of these contacts are made in solution in the absence of promoter DNA, a critical prediction of the prerecruitment hypothesis. Here, we identified seven single-alanine substitutions of the region 4 of σ 70 (σ 70 R4) of RNAP that reduce SoxS activation of class II promoters. With genetic epistasis tests between these σ 70 R4 mutants and positive control mutants of SoxS, we identified 10 pairs of amino acids that interact with each other in E. coli. Using the yeast two-hybrid system and affinity immobilization assays, we showed that SoxS and σ 70 R4 can interact in solution (i.e., “off-DNA”). The interaction requires amino acids of the class I/II (but not the class II) positive control surface of SoxS, and five amino acids of σ 70 R4 that reduce activation in E. coli also reduce the SoxS–σ 70 R4 interaction in yeast. One of the epistatic interactions that occur in E. coli also occurs in the yeast two-hybrid system (i.e., off-DNA). Importantly, we infer that the five epistatic interactions occurring in E. coli that require an amino acid of the class II surface occur “on-DNA” at class II promoters. Finding that SoxS contacts σ 70 R4 both off-DNA and on-DNA is consistent with the prerecruitment hypothesis. Moreover, SoxS is now the first example of an E. coli transcriptional activator that uses a single positive control surface to make specific protein–protein contacts with two different subunits of RNAP.
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