Altered promoter recognition by mutant forms of the sigma 70 subunit of Escherichia coli RNA polymerase. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • We have systematically assayed the in vivo promoter recognition properties of 13 mutations in rpoD, the gene that encodes the sigma 70 subunit of Escherichia coli RNA polymerase holoenzyme, using transcriptional fusions to 37 mutant and wild-type promoters. We found three classes of rpoD mutations: (1) mutations that suggest contacts between amino acid side-chains of sigma 70 and specific bases in the promoter; (2) mutations that appear to affect either sequence independent contacts to promoter DNA or isomerization of the polymerase; and (3) mutations that have little or no effect on promoter recognition. Our results lead us to suggest that a sequence near the C terminus of sigma 70, which is similar to the helix-turn-helix DNA binding motif of phage and bacterial DNA binding proteins, is responsible for recognition of the -35 region, and that a sequence internal to sigma 70, in a region which is highly conserved among sigma factors, recognizes the -10 region of the promoter. rpoD mutations that lie in the recognition helix of the proposed helix-turn-helix motif affect interactions with specific bases in the -35 region, while mutations in the upstream helix, which is thought to contact the phosphate backbone, have sequence-independent effect on promoter recognition.

published proceedings

  • J Mol Biol

altmetric score

  • 3

author list (cited authors)

  • Siegele, D. A., Hu, J. C., Walter, W. A., & Gross, C. A.

citation count

  • 330

complete list of authors

  • Siegele, DA||Hu, JC||Walter, WA||Gross, CA

publication date

  • January 1989