Abstract
The RNA polymerase II (Pol II) is a eukaryotic enzyme that catalyzes the synthesis of the messenger RNA using a DNA template. Despite numerous biochemical and biophysical studies, it remains elusive whether the “secondary channel” is the only route for NTP to reach the active site of the enzyme or if the “main channel” could be an alternative. On this regard, crystallographic structures of Pol II have been extremely useful to understand the structural basis of transcription, however, the conformation of the unpaired non-template DNA part of the full transcription bubble (TB) is still unknown. Since diffusion routes of the nucleoside triphosphate (NTP) substrate through the main channel might overlap with the TB region, gaining structural information of the full TB is critical for a complete understanding of Pol II transcription process. In this study, we have built a structural model of Pol II with a complete transcription bubble based on multiple sources of existing structural data and used Molecular Dynamics (MD) simulations together with structural analysis to shed light on NTP entry pathways. Interestingly, we found that although both channels have enough space to allow NTP loading, the percentage of MD conformations containing enough space for NTP loading through the secondary channel is twice higher than that of the main channel. Further energetic study based on MD simulations with NTP loaded in the channels has revealed that the diffusion of the NTP through the main channel is greatly disfavored by electrostatic repulsion between the NTP and the highly negatively charged backbones of nucleotides in the non-template DNA strand. Taken together, our results suggest that the secondary channel is the major route for NTP entry during Pol II transcription.
Highlights
The RNA polymerase II (Pol II) is a processive eukaryotic enzyme that plays a central role in transcription
The RNA polymerase II (Pol II) is a central enzyme that reads the genetic information encoded in the DNA template to synthetize a messenger RNA
We performed Molecular Dynamics (MD) simulations and applied structural analysis to study the routes of nucleoside triphosphate (NTP) diffusion
Summary
The RNA polymerase II (Pol II) is a processive eukaryotic enzyme that plays a central role in transcription. It catalyzes the synthesis of messenger RNA (mRNA) with high fidelity and efficiency. Double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) enters the enzyme and unwinds around the active site. The dsDNA strand separates and bends at the downstream edge of the transcription bubble, leaving a DNA strand exposed as template (template DNA strand) for mRNA synthesis [1,2,3,4,5]. The template DNA strand separates from the nascent mRNA strand and re-anneals with the nontemplate DNA strand at the upstream edge of the transcription bubble (Fig 1)
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