Protein determinants of RNA binding by DNA polymerase of the T4-related bacteriophage RB69.
The Journal of biological chemistry (2002), Volume 277, Page 33041
Abstract:
DNA polymerase (gp43) of phage T4 plays two biological roles, one as an essential DNA binding replication enzyme and the other as an mRNA-specific autogenous translational repressor. Binding of T4 gp43 to its mRNA target (translational operator RNA) interferes with gp43-DNA interactions, but it is unclear how the protein determinants for binding DNA are affected by the dynamics of gp43-mRNA interactions. We have used RB69 gp43, a natural variant of the T4 enzyme whose crystal structure has been determined to identify protein sites that respond to the interaction with specific RNA. We used protein phosphorylation markers, photocross-linking studies, protease sensitivity assays, and mutational analyses to examine the effects of operator RNA on the enzyme's five structural domains (N, exo, palm, fingers, and thumb). Our studies suggest that this RNA affects gp43-DNA interactions through global effects on protein structure that occlude DNA-binding sites but leave the enzyme accessible to interactions with the sliding clamp (RB69 gp45) and possibly other polymerase accessory proteins. We discuss the possible biological significance of putative RNA-binding motifs in the N and palm domains of RB69 gp43.
Polymerases:
Topics:
Structure and Structure/Function, Accessory Proteins/Complexes
One line summary:
RNA binding blocks the direct binding of RB69 polymerase to DNA, however it allows accessory complexes (e.g. RB69 gp45) access to the polymerase.
Status:
new | topics/pols set | partial results | complete | validated |
Results:
No results available for this paper.