Nanopore tweezers show fractional-nucleotide translocation in sequence-dependent pausing by RNA polymerase

Author:

Nova Ian C.1,Craig Jonathan M.1ORCID,Mazumder Abhishek2ORCID,Laszlo Andrew H.1ORCID,Derrington Ian M.1,Noakes Matthew T.1ORCID,Brinkerhoff Henry1,Yang Shuya2,Vahedian-Movahed Hanif2ORCID,Li Lingting3ORCID,Zhang Yu3,Bowman Jasmine L.1,Huang Jesse R.1ORCID,Mount Jonathan W.1ORCID,Ebright Richard H.2ORCID,Gundlach Jens H.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195

2. Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ 08854

3. Key Laboratory of Synthetic Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences Center for Excellence in Molecular Plant Sciences, Shanghai Institute of Plant Physiology and Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 200032, China

Abstract

RNA polymerases (RNAPs) carry out the first step in the central dogma of molecular biology by transcribing DNA into RNA. Despite their importance, much about how RNAPs work remains unclear, in part because the small (3.4 Angstrom) and fast (~40 ms/nt) steps during transcription were difficult to resolve. Here, we used high-resolution nanopore tweezers to observe the motion of single Escherichia coli RNAP molecules as it transcribes DNA ~1,000 times improved temporal resolution, resolving single-nucleotide and fractional-nucleotide steps of individual RNAPs at saturating nucleoside triphosphate concentrations. We analyzed RNAP during processive transcription elongation and sequence-dependent pausing at the yrbL elemental pause sequence. Each time RNAP encounters the yrbL elemental pause sequence, it rapidly interconverts between five translocational states, residing predominantly in a half-translocated state. The kinetics and force-dependence of this half-translocated state indicate it is a functional intermediate between pre- and post-translocated states. Using structural and kinetics data, we show that, in the half-translocated and post-translocated states, sequence-specific protein–DNA interaction occurs between RNAP and a guanine base at the downstream end of the transcription bubble (core recognition element). Kinetic data show that this interaction stabilizes the half-translocated and post-translocated states relative to the pre-translocated state. We develop a kinetic model for RNAP at the yrbL pause and discuss this in the context of key structural features.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Human Genome Research Institute

HHS | National Institutes of Health

National Natural science foundation of china

CAS Leading Science Key Research Program

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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