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1.
Atomic absorption spectroscopy demonstrated that highly purified RNA polymerase II from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae binds seven zinc ions. This number agrees with the number of potential zinc-binding sites among the 12 different subunits of the enzyme and with our observation that the ninth largest subunit alone is able to bind two zinc ions. The zinc-binding motif in the largest subunit of the enzyme was investigated using mutagenic analysis. Altering any one of the six conserved residues in the zinc-binding motif conferred either a lethal or conditional phenotype, and zinc blot analysis indicated that mutant forms of the domain had a 2-fold reduction in zinc affinity. Mutations in the zinc-binding domain reduced RNA polymerase II activity in cell-free extracts, even though protein blot analysis indicated that the mutant subunit was present in excess of wild-type levels. Purification of one mutant RNA polymerase revealed a subunit profile that was wild-type like with the exception of two subunits not required for core enzyme activity (Rpb4p and Rpb7p), which were missing. Core activity of the mutant enzyme was reduced 20-fold. We conclude that mutations in the zinc-binding domain can reduce core activity without altering the association of any of the subunits required for this activity.  相似文献   

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The second-largest subunits of eukaryal RNA polymerases are similar to the β subunits of prokaryal RNA polymerases throughout much of their lengths. The second-largest subunits from eukaryal RNA polymerases contain a four-cysteine Zn-binding domain at their C termini. The domain is also present in archaeal homologs but is absent from prokaryal homologs. Here, we investigated the role of the C-terminal Zn-binding domain of Rpa135, the second-largest subunit of yeast RNA polymerase I. Analysis of nonfunctional Rpa135 mutants indicated that the Zn-binding domain is required for recruitment of the largest subunit, Rpa190, into the RNA polymerase I complex. Curiously, the essential function of the Rpa135 Zn-binding domain is not related to Zn2+ binding per se, since replacement of only one of the four cysteine residues with alanine led to the loss of Rpa135 function. Even more strikingly, replacement of all four cysteines with alanines resulted in functional Rpa135.  相似文献   

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RNA polymerase III (C) and its transcription factors.   总被引:25,自引:0,他引:25  
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I Brun  A Sentenac    M Werner 《The EMBO journal》1997,16(18):5730-5741
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Yeast RNA polymerases A (I) and C (III) share a subunit called AC19. The gene encoding AC19 has been isolated from yeast genomic DNA using oligonucleotide probes deduced from peptide sequences of the isolated subunit. This gene (RPC19) contains an intron-free open reading frame of 143 amino acid residues. RPC19 is a single copy gene that maps on chromosome II and is essential for cell viability. The amino acid sequence contains a sequence motif common to the Escherichia coli RNA polymerase alpha subunit, the Saccharomyces cerevisiae AC40 and B44.5 subunits, the human hRPB33 product, and the CnjC conjugation-specific gene product of Tetrahymena. The 5'-upstream region contains a sequence element, the PAC box, that has been conserved in at least 10 genes encoding subunits of RNA polymerases A and C.  相似文献   

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The RPC31 gene encoding the C31 subunit of Saccharomyces cerevisiae RNA polymerase C (III) has been isolated, starting from a C-terminal fragment cloned on a lambda gt11 library. It is unique on the yeast genome and lies on the left arm of chromosome XIV, very close to a NotI site. Its coding sequence perfectly matches the amino acid sequence of two oligopeptides prepared from purified C31. It is also identical to the ACP2 gene previously described as encoding an HMG1-like protein (W. Haggren and D. Kolodrubetz, Mol. Cell. Biol. 8:1282-1289, 1988). Thus, ACP2 and RPC31 are allelic and encode a subunit of RNA polymerase C. The c31 protein has a highly acidic C-terminal tail also found in several other chromatin-interacting proteins, including animal HMG1. Outside this domain, however, there is no appreciable homology to any known protein. The growth phenotypes of a gene deletion, of insertions, and of nonsense mutations indicate that the C31 protein is strictly required for cell growth and that most of the acidic domain is essential for its function. Random mutagenesis failed to yield temperature-sensitive mutants, but a slowly growing mutant was constructed by partial suppression of a UAA nonsense allele of RPC31. Its reduced rate of tRNA synthesis in vivo relative to 5.8S rRNA supports the hypothesis that the C31 protein is a functional subunit of RNA polymerase C.  相似文献   

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Local sequence similarity exists between the subunit 2 of eukaryotic RNA polymerases II and the barnase-type bacterial RNases. The RNase-like domain from the Rpb2 ofSchizosaccharomyces pombe was expressed inEscherichia coli as a GST fusion protein and examined for its RNase activity. When the GST fusion protein was incubated in vitro with32P-labeled RNA, the RNA degradation activity was less than 0.1%, if any, of the level of synthetic barnase. In order to check the in vivo function of this region, we constructed two mutantrpb2 alleles,rpb2 E357A andrpb2 H3a6L , each carrying a single amino acid substitution at the site correponding to one of the three essential amino acid residues forming the catalytic site in barnase (mutation of barnase at the corresponding sites results in complete loss of RNase activity) and five other mutantrpb2 alleles, each carrying a single mutation at various positions within the RNase-like domain but outside the putative catalytic site for RNase activity. When these mutantrpb2 alleles were expressed in anrpb2-disruptedS. pombe strain, all the mutants grew as well as the wild-type parent and did not show any clear defective phenotypes. These results suggest either that the RNase-like domain in Rpb2 does not function as an RNase in vivo or that the RNase activity of this domain, if present at all, is not essential for cell growth.  相似文献   

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The RPC34 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae was cloned by immunological screening, using antibodies raised against the C34 polypeptide of the RNA polymerase III (C). This single copy gene was located near the centromere of chromosome XIV. It included a coding sequence of 317 amino acids that strictly matched two internal oligopeptides of C34. This polypeptide is a specific component of RNA polymerase III, with no significant homology to any other RNA polymerase subunit known so far. It is an essential subunit, since inactivation by deletion or nonsense mutations led to a recessive lethal phenotype. Moreover, a partially blocked mutant, rpc34-F297, had a reduced tRNA synthesis in vivo but no detectable effect on 5 S RNA synthesis. The latter phenotype was observed for all conditionally defective RNA polymerase III mutants isolated so far.  相似文献   

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RPC53 is shown to be an essential gene encoding the C53 subunit specifically associated with yeast RNA polymerase C (III). Temperature-sensitive rpc53 mutants were generated and showed a rapid inhibition of tRNA synthesis after transfer to the restrictive temperature. Unexpectedly, the rpc53 mutants preferentially arrested their cell division in the G1 phase as large, round, unbudded cells. The RPC53 DNA sequence is predicted to code for a hydrophilic M(r)-46,916 protein enriched in charged amino acid residues. The carboxy-terminal 136 amino acids of C53 are significantly similar (25% identical amino acid residues) to the same region of the human BN51 protein. The BN51 cDNA was originally isolated by its ability to complement a temperature-sensitive hamster cell mutant that undergoes a G1 cell division arrest, as is true for the rpc53 mutants.  相似文献   

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The alpha subunit of Escherichia coli DNA-dependent RNA polymerase is encoded by the rpoA gene and plays a major role in enzyme assembly. A set of C-terminal deletion mutations of the rpoA gene was constructed. The results of mixed reconstitution experiments in vitro, using the truncated alpha polypeptides encoded by the rpoA deletion mutants, suggest that the amino-terminal two-thirds of alpha subunit is sufficient for the formation of pseudo-core complexes containing both beta and beta' subunits.  相似文献   

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ABC14.5 (Rpb8) is a eukaryotic subunit common to all three nuclear RNA polymerases. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, ABC14.5 (Rpb8) is essential for cell viability, however its function remains unknown. We have cloned and characterised the Schizosaccharomyces pombe rpb8(+) cDNA. We found that S.pombe rpb8, unlike the similarly diverged human orthologue, cannot substitute for S.cerevisiae ABC14. 5 in vivo. To obtain information on the function of this RNA polymerase shared subunit we have used S.pombe rpb8 as a naturally altered molecule in heterologous expression assays in S.cerevisiae. Amino acid residue differences within the 67 N-terminal residues contribute to the functional distinction of the two yeast orthologues in S.cerevisiae. Overexpression of the S.cerevisiae largest subunit of RNA polymerase III C160 (Rpc1) allows S.pombe rpb8 to functionally replace ABC14.5 in S.cerevisiae, suggesting a specific genetic interaction between the S.cerevisiae ABC14.5 (Rpb8) and C160 subunits. We provide further molecular and biochemical evidence showing that the heterologously expressed S.pombe rpb8 molecule selectively affects RNApolymerase III but not RNA polymerase I complex assembly. We also report the identification of a S.cerevisiae ABC14.5-G120D mutant which affects RNA polymerase III.  相似文献   

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