Azotobacter vinelandii RNA polymerase. XIV. Role of sulfhydryl groups in the structure and function of the Azotobacter vinelandii RNA polymerase
- 1 October 1975
- journal article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Biochemistry
- Vol. 14 (20) , 4522-4527
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi00691a029
Abstract
Exposure of sulfhydryl groups as indicated by titration kinetics is decreased under conditions where RNA polymerase exists as a dimer or higher aggregate (low salt), in the presence of Mn2+, or when bound to d(A-T). Incubation of phenylmercurisulfonate with RNA polymerase above pH 9.0 results in loss of d(A-T) binding ability. Poly(U) binding is more sensitive to sulfhydryl modification and is lost as pH's above 8.0. The presence of 4 mM Mn2+ has an obvious effect in stabilizing the polymerase-poly(U) complex when incubated with 10 muM phenylmercurisulfonate + 1 M urea. Incubation of the enzyme with the mercurial and urea results in disaggregation to subprotomeric forms and release of the alpha subunit. Similar treatment in the presence of 4 mM MnSO4 stabilizes the protomeric structure of the enzyme. During chain elongation the enzyme exists as a ternary d(A-T)n-enzyme-r(U-A)n complex in which the bound d(A-T)n is refractory to the destabilizing effect of the mercurial; however, further phosphodiester bond formation is inhibited. The results are defined in terms of a role which reflects the involvement of polymerase sulfhydryl groups in the various conformations necessary for subunit-subunit interaction, tight template binding and catalytic activity.Keywords
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