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J. Bacteriol., Sep 1996, 5263-5271, Vol 178, No. 17
PL Tavormina, R Landick and CA Gross
The beta subunit of prokaryotic RNA polymerase shares significant sequence
similarity with its eukaryotic and archaeal counterparts across most of the
protein. Nine segments of particularly high similarity have been identified
and are termed segments A through I. We have isolated severely defective
Escherichia coli RNA polymerase mutants, most of which are unable to
support bacterial growth. The majority of the substitutions affect residues
in one of the conserved segments of beta, including invariant residues in
segments D (amino acids 548 to 577), E (amino acids 660 to 678), and I
(amino acids 1198 to 1296). In addition, recessive-lethal mutations that
affect residues highly conserved only among prokaryotes were identified.
They include a substitution in the extreme amino terminus of beta, a region
in which no substitutions have previously been identified, and one rpoB
mutation that truncates the polypeptide without abolishing minimal
polymerase function in vitro. To examine the recessive-lethal alleles in
vitro, we devised a novel method to remove nonmutant enzyme from RNA
polymerase preparations by affinity tagging the chromosomal rpoB gene. In
vitro examination of a subset of purified recessive-lethal RNA polymerases
revealed that several substitutions, including all of those altering
conserved residues in segment I, severely decrease transcript elongation
and increase termination. We discuss the insights these mutants lend to a
structure-function analysis of RNA polymerase.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Isolation, purification, and in vitro characterization of recessive- lethal-mutant RNA polymerases from Escherichia coli
Department of Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin--Madison 53706, USA.
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