3'-End formation at the phage .lambda. tR1 .rho.-dependent transcription termination site

Abstract
The rho-dependent transcription terminator tR1 of bacteriophage lambda stops RNA synthesis downstream of the major rightward promoter, PR, shortly after the cro gene. Terminated transcripts produced in a purified in vitro transcription system display a heterodisperse set of 3' termini, occurring in clusters located at +290-300, 308-312, 340-345, 385-390, and 440-450 nucleotides from the transcription start site [Morgan, W.D., Bear, D.G., & von Hippel, P.H. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 9553-9564]. However, transcripts from the same promoter in vivo have been reported to end primarily at +310-312 [Court, D., Brady, C., Rosenberg, M., Wulff, D. L., Behr, M., Mahoney, M., & Izumi, S. (1980) J. Mol. Biol. 138, 231-254]. In order to understand the nature of this discrepancy, we have carried out a comparative analysis of lambda PR transcription products produced in translationally active S30 cell extracts, in a purified in vitro system and in vivo. RNAs from the cell extracts coupled to translation show primarily three PR-derived transcripts beginning at one predominant 5' end and terminating at +263, 308, and 318. Sites +263 and +308 appear to be RNA processing sites. S1 nuclease mapping studies of RNAs produced in vivo show one 5' end and two 3' termini ending at +263 and 311; the +263 site is the predominant 3' end. When transcripts produced in a purified in vitro transcription system are incubated in the S30 cell extract under various conditions, the RNAs are degraded to two primary products with lengths of 263 and 308-311 nt.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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