Abstract

A novel transcriptional proofreading mechanism associated with the beta-subunit of wild-type RNA polymerase from Escherichia coli is suggested from the following data. The purified holoenzyme contains an NTPase activity which specifically converts noncognate NTPs to their corresponding NDP in a template-dependent manner during in vitro transcription of synthetic single- and double-stranded templates. In contrast, purified enzyme from an rpoB mutant which shows increased transcriptional error lacked template-dependent NTP hydrolytic activity. The NTP hydrolytic activity of wild-type enzyme was critically dependent on the integrity of the initiation complex, and required continued transcriptional elongation. Transcription and translation of the lacZ gene proceeded 17% faster in the mutant than in its wild-type parent. These results are discussed in terms of a proofreading model in which the rate of transcription is limited by proofreading events that involve recognition and hydrolysis of noncognate NTPs before they can be misincorporated into RNA.

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