Escherichia coli transcription termination factor Rho is a ring-shaped hexameric protein that uses the energy derived from ATP hydrolysis to dissociate RNA transcripts from the ternary elongation complex. To test a current: model for the interaction of Rho with RNA, three derivatives of Rho were made containing single cysteine residues and modified with a photo-activable cross-linker. The positions for the cysteines were: 1) in part of the primary RNA-binding site in the N terminus (Cys-82 Rho); 2) in a connecting polypeptide proposed to be on the outside of the hexamer (Cys-153 Rho); and 3) near the proposed secondary RNA-binding site in the ATP-binding domain (Cys-325 Rho). Results from the cross-linking of the modified Rho proteins to a series of λ cro RNA derivatives showed that Cys-82 Rho formed cross-links with all transcripts containing the Rho utilization (rut) site, that Cys-325 Rho formed cross-links to transcripts that had the rut site and 10 or more residues 3′ of the rut site, and that Cys-153 did not form crosslinks with any of the transcripts. From a model of the quaternary structure of Rho, which is largely based on homology to the F 1-ATPase, amino acid 82 is located near the top of the hexamer, and amino acid 325 is located on a solvent-accessible loop in the center of the hexamer. These data are consistent with binding of the rut region of RNA around the crown, with its 3′-segment passing through the center of the Rho hexamer.
CITATION STYLE
Burgess, B. R., & Richardson, J. P. (2001). RNA Passes through the Hole of the Protein Hexamer in the Complex with the Escherichia coli Rho Factor. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 276(6), 4182–4189. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M007066200
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