| Literature DB >> 34782462 |
Adrien Chauvier1,2, Pujan Ajmera1,2, Rajeev Yadav1,2, Nils G Walter3,2.
Abstract
Cotranscriptional RNA folding is widely assumed to influence the timely control of gene expression, but our understanding remains limited. In bacteria, the fluoride (F-)-sensing riboswitch is a transcriptional control element essential to defend against toxic F- levels. Using this model riboswitch, we find that its ligand F- and essential bacterial transcription factor NusA compete to bind the cotranscriptionally folding RNA, opposing each other's modulation of downstream pausing and termination by RNA polymerase. Single-molecule fluorescence assays probing active transcription elongation complexes discover that NusA unexpectedly binds highly reversibly, frequently interrogating the complex for emerging, cotranscriptionally folding RNA duplexes. NusA thus fine-tunes the transcription rate in dependence of the ligand-responsive higher-order structure of the riboswitch. At the high NusA concentrations found intracellularly, this dynamic modulation is expected to lead to adaptive bacterial transcription regulation with fast response times.Entities:
Keywords: NusA; RNA polymerase pausing; cotranscriptional folding; riboswitch; single-molecule fluorescence microscopy
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34782462 PMCID: PMC8617461 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2109026118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205