6M7J
Mycobacterium tuberculosis RNAP with RbpA/us fork and Corallopyronin
Summary for 6M7J
Entry DOI | 10.2210/pdb6m7j/pdb |
EMDB information | 9037 9039 9041 9047 |
Descriptor | DNA-directed RNA polymerase subunit alpha, MAGNESIUM ION, methyl [(1E,5R)-5-{(3E)-3-[(2E,4E,8R,9E,12E)-1,8-dihydroxy-2,5,9-trimethyltetradeca-2,4,9,12-tetraen-1-ylidene]-2,4-dioxo-3,4-d ihydro-2H-pyran-6-yl}hex-1-en-1-yl]carbamate, ... (11 entities in total) |
Functional Keywords | initiation, transcription bubble, closed clamp, open promoter complex, transcription, transcription-dna complex |
Biological source | Mycobacterium tuberculosis More |
Total number of polymer chains | 9 |
Total formula weight | 454881.96 |
Authors | Darst, S.A.,Campbell, E.A.,Boyaci Selcuk, H.,Chen, J. (deposition date: 2018-08-20, release date: 2018-11-21, Last modification date: 2024-03-13) |
Primary citation | Boyaci, H.,Chen, J.,Jansen, R.,Darst, S.A.,Campbell, E.A. Structures of an RNA polymerase promoter melting intermediate elucidate DNA unwinding. Nature, 565:382-385, 2019 Cited by PubMed Abstract: A key regulated step of transcription is promoter melting by RNA polymerase (RNAP) to form the open promoter complex. To generate the open complex, the conserved catalytic core of the RNAP combines with initiation factors to locate promoter DNA, unwind 12-14 base pairs of the DNA duplex and load the template-strand DNA into the RNAP active site. Formation of the open complex is a multi-step process during which transient intermediates of unknown structure are formed. Here we present cryo-electron microscopy structures of bacterial RNAP-promoter DNA complexes, including structures of partially melted intermediates. The structures show that late steps of promoter melting occur within the RNAP cleft, delineate key roles for fork-loop 2 and switch 2-universal structural features of RNAP-in restricting access of DNA to the RNAP active site, and explain why clamp opening is required to allow entry of single-stranded template DNA into the active site. The key roles of fork-loop 2 and switch 2 suggest a common mechanism for late steps in promoter DNA opening to enable gene expression across all domains of life. PubMed: 30626968DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0840-5 PDB entries with the same primary citation |
Experimental method | ELECTRON MICROSCOPY (4.4 Å) |
Structure validation
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