Facilitated recycling protects human RNA polymerase III from repression by Maf1 in vitro

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Abstract

Yeast cells synthesize ∼3-6 million molecules of tRNA every cell cycle at a rate of ∼2-4 transcripts/gene/s. This high rate of transcription is achieved through many rounds of reinitiation by RNA polymerase (pol) III on stable DNA-bound complexes of the initiation factor TFIIIB. Studies in yeast have shown that the rate of reinitiation is increased by facilitated recycling, a process that involves the repeated reloading of the polymerase on the same transcription unit. However, when nutrients become limiting or stress conditions are encountered, RNA pol III transcription is rapidly repressed through the action of the conserved Maf1 protein. Here we examine the relationship between Maf1-mediated repression and facilitated recycling in a human RNA pol III in vitro system. Using an immobilized template transcription assay, we demonstrate that facilitated recycling is conserved from yeast to humans. We assessed the ability of recombinant human Maf1 to inhibit different steps in transcription before and after preinitiation complex assembly. We show that recombinant Maf1 can inhibit the recruitment of TFIIIB and RNA pol III to immobilized templates. However, RNA pol III bound to preinitiation complexes or in elongation complexes is protected from repression by Maf1 and can undergo several rounds of initiation. This indicates that recombinant Maf1 is unable to inhibit facilitated recycling. The data suggest that additional biochemical stepsmaybe necessary for rapid Maf1-dependent repression of RNA pol III transcription. © 2008 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

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Čabart, P., Lee, J. H., & Willis, I. M. (2008). Facilitated recycling protects human RNA polymerase III from repression by Maf1 in vitro. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 283(52), 36108–36117. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M807538200

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