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The transcription-repair coupling factor Mfd associates with RNA polymerase in the absence of exogenous damage

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posted on 2024-11-16, 03:46 authored by Han Ngoc Ho, Antonius van OijenAntonius van Oijen, Harshad Ghodke
During transcription elongation, bacterial RNA polymerase (RNAP) can pause, backtrack or stall when transcribing template DNA. Stalled transcription elongation complexes at sites of bulky lesions can be rescued by the transcription terminator Mfd. The molecular mechanisms of Mfd recruitment to transcription complexes in vivo remain to be elucidated, however. Using single-molecule live-cell imaging, we show that Mfd associates with elongation transcription complexes even in the absence of exogenous genotoxic stresses. This interaction requires an intact RNA polymerase-interacting domain of Mfd. In the presence of drugs that stall RNAP, we find that Mfd associates pervasively with RNAP. The residence time of Mfd foci reduces from 30 to 18 s in the presence of endogenous UvrA, suggesting that UvrA promotes the resolution of Mfd-RNAP complexes on DNA. Our results reveal that RNAP is frequently rescued by Mfd during normal growth and highlight a ubiquitous house-keeping role for Mfd in regulating transcription elongation.

Funding

Functional Dissection of the Bacterial Replisome

Australian Research Council

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Under the hood: single-molecule studies of multi-protein machines

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Ho, H. N., van Oijen, A. M. & Ghodke, H. (2018). The transcription-repair coupling factor Mfd associates with RNA polymerase in the absence of exogenous damage. Nature Communications, 9 1570-1-1570-12.

Journal title

Nature Communications

Volume

9

Issue

1

Language

English

RIS ID

127077

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