Structure of rho factor: an RNA-binding domain and a separate region with strong similarity to proven ATP-binding domains.
- 1 April 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 85 (8) , 2538-2542
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.85.8.2538
Abstract
The domain structure of .rho. protein, transcription termination factor of Escherichia coli, was analyzed by oligonucleotide site-directed mutagenesis and chemical modification methods. The single cysteine at position 202, previously thought to be essential for .rho. function, was changed to serine or to glycine with no detectable effects on the protein''s hexameric structure, RNA-binding ability, or ATPase, helicase, and transcription termination activities. A 151-residue amino-terminal fragment (N1), generated by hydroxylamine cleavage, and its complementary carboxyl-terminal fragment of 268 amino acids (N2) were extracted from NaDod-SO4/polyacrylamide gels and renatured. The N1 fragment binds poly(C) and mRNA corresponding to the .rho.-dependent terminator sequence trp t'', but not RNA unrecognized by .rho.; hence, this small renaturable domain retains not only the binding ability but also the specificity of the native protein. Uncleaved .rho. renatures to regain its RNA-dependent ATPase activity, but neither N1 nor N2 exhibits any detectable ATP hydrolysis. Similarly, the two fragments, isolated separately but renatured together, are unable to hydrolyze ATP. Sequence homology to the .alpha. subunit of the E. coli F1 membrane ATPase, and to consensus elements of other nucleotide-binding proteins, strongly suggests a structural domain for ATP binding that begins after amino acid 164. The implications of discrete domains for RNA and nucleotide binding are discussed in the context of requirements for specific interactions between RNA-binding and ATP-hydrolysis sites during transcription termination.This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
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