Crystal structure of a bacterial RNA polymerase holoenzyme at 2.6 A resolution.

Article Details

Citation

Vassylyev DG, Sekine S, Laptenko O, Lee J, Vassylyeva MN, Borukhov S, Yokoyama S

Crystal structure of a bacterial RNA polymerase holoenzyme at 2.6 A resolution.

Nature. 2002 Jun 13;417(6890):712-9. Epub 2002 May 8.

PubMed ID
12000971 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

In bacteria, the binding of a single protein, the initiation factor sigma, to a multi-subunit RNA polymerase core enzyme results in the formation of a holoenzyme, the active form of RNA polymerase essential for transcription initiation. Here we report the crystal structure of a bacterial RNA polymerase holoenzyme from Thermus thermophilus at 2.6 A resolution. In the structure, two amino-terminal domains of the sigma subunit form a V-shaped structure near the opening of the upstream DNA-binding channel of the active site cleft. The carboxy-terminal domain of sigma is near the outlet of the RNA-exit channel, about 57 A from the N-terminal domains. The extended linker domain forms a hairpin protruding into the active site cleft, then stretching through the RNA-exit channel to connect the N- and C-terminal domains. The holoenzyme structure provides insight into the structural organization of transcription intermediate complexes and into the mechanism of transcription initiation.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
DNA-directed RNA polymerase subunit alphaQ9Z9H6Details