Structural basis for promoter specificity switching of RNA polymerase by a phage factor.

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Citation

Tagami S, Sekine S, Minakhin L, Esyunina D, Akasaka R, Shirouzu M, Kulbachinskiy A, Severinov K, Yokoyama S

Structural basis for promoter specificity switching of RNA polymerase by a phage factor.

Genes Dev. 2014 Mar 1;28(5):521-31. doi: 10.1101/gad.233916.113.

PubMed ID
24589779 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Transcription of DNA to RNA by DNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RNAP) is the first step of gene expression and a major regulation point. Bacteriophages hijack their host's transcription machinery and direct it to serve their needs. The gp39 protein encoded by Thermus thermophilus phage P23-45 binds the host's RNAP and inhibits transcription initiation from its major "-10/-35" class promoters. Phage promoters belonging to the minor "extended -10" class are minimally inhibited. We report the crystal structure of the T. thermophilus RNAP holoenzyme complexed with gp39, which explains the mechanism for RNAP promoter specificity switching. gp39 simultaneously binds to the RNAP beta-flap domain and the C-terminal domain of the sigma subunit (region 4 of the sigma subunit [sigma4]), thus relocating the beta-flap tip and sigma4. The ~45 A displacement of sigma4 is incompatible with its binding to the -35 promoter consensus element, thus accounting for the inhibition of transcription from -10/-35 class promoters. In contrast, this conformational change is compatible with the recognition of extended -10 class promoters. These results provide the structural bases for the conformational modulation of the host's RNAP promoter specificity to switch gene expression toward supporting phage development for gp39 and, potentially, other phage proteins, such as T4 AsiA.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
RNA polymerase sigma factor SigAQ5SKW1Details