Abstract

The amino-terminal arginine-rich motif of the phage HK022 Nun protein binds phage lambda nascent mRNA transcripts while the carboxy-terminal domain binds RNA polymerase and arrests transcription. The role of specific residues in the carboxy-terminal domain in transcription termination were investigated by mutagenesis, in vitro and in vivo functional assays, and NMR spectroscopy. Coordination of zinc to three histidine residues in the carboxy-terminus inhibited RNA binding by the amino-terminal domain; however, only two of these histidines were required for transcription arrest. These results suggest that additional zinc-coordinating residues are supplied by RNA polymerase in the context of the Nun-RNA polymerase complex. Substitution of the penultimate carboxy-terminal tryptophan residue with alanine or leucine blocks transcription arrest, whereas a tyrosine substitution is innocuous. Wild-type Nun fails to arrest transcription on single-stranded templates. These results suggest that Nun inhibition of transcription elongation is due in part to interactions between the carboxy-terminal tryptophan of Nun and double-stranded DNA, possibly by intercalation. A model for the termination activity of Nun is developed on the basis of these data.

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