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Mol. Cell. Biol., Nov 1996, 6468-6476, Vol 16, No. 11
SA Shaaban, EV Bobkova, DM Chudzik and BD Hall
We have studied the in vitro elongation and termination properties of
several yeast RNA polymerase III (pol III) mutant enzymes that have altered
in vivo termination behavior (S. A. Shaaban, B. M. Krupp, and B. D. Hall,
Mol. Cell. Biol. 15:1467-1478, 1995). The pattern of completed-transcript
release was also characterized for three of the mutant enzymes. The
mutations studied occupy amino acid regions 300 to 325, 455 to 521, and
1061 to 1082 of the RET1 protein (P. James, S. Whelen, and B. D. Hall, J.
Biol. Chem. 266:5616-5624, 1991), the second largest subunit of yeast RNA
pol III. In general, mutant enzymes which have increased termination
require a longer time to traverse a template gene than does wild-type pol
III; the converse holds true for most decreased-termination mutants. One
increased-termination mutant (K310T I324K) was faster and two reduced
termination mutants (K512N and T455I E478K) were slower than the wild-type
enzyme. In most cases, these changes in overall elongation kinetics can be
accounted for by a correspondingly longer or shorter dwell time at pause
sites within the SUP4 tRNA(Tyr) gene. Of the three mutants analyzed for RNA
release, one (T455I) was similar to the wild type while the two others
(T455I E478K and E478K) bound the completed SUP4 pre-tRNA more avidly. The
results of this study support the view that termination is a multistep
pathway in which several different regions of the RET1 protein are actively
involved. Region 300 to 325 likely affects a step involved in RNA release,
while the Rif homology region, amino acids 455 to 521, interacts with the
nascent RNA 3' end. The dual effects of several mutations on both
elongation kinetics and RNA release suggest that the protein motifs
affected by them have multiple roles in the steps leading to transcription
termination.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
In vitro analysis of elongation and termination by mutant RNA polymerases with altered termination behavior
Department of Genetics, University of Washington, Seattle 98195-7360, USA.
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