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@proceedings{2291213, author = {Tužinčin, Dávid and Padrta, Petr and Šanderová, Hana and Rabatinová, Alžběta and Bendová, Kateřina and Krásný, Libor and Žídek, Lukáš and Kadeřávek, Pavel}, booktitle = {Inaugural Biochemistry Symposium Puzzles of (Bio)molecular Structure and Dynamics: NMR spectroscopy and complementary approaches.}, keywords = {σA factor; RNA polymerase; Bacillus subtilis; NMR; conformational exchange}, language = {eng}, title = {Domain 1.1 of σA factor of RNA polymerase from Bacillus subtilis beyond its major state conformation}, url = {https://www.jku.at/fileadmin/gruppen/385/202305-Symposium/BookOfAbstracts.pdf}, year = {2023} }
TY - CONF ID - 2291213 AU - Tužinčin, Dávid - Padrta, Petr - Šanderová, Hana - Rabatinová, Alžběta - Bendová, Kateřina - Krásný, Libor - Žídek, Lukáš - Kadeřávek, Pavel PY - 2023 TI - Domain 1.1 of σA factor of RNA polymerase from Bacillus subtilis beyond its major state conformation KW - σA factor KW - RNA polymerase KW - Bacillus subtilis KW - NMR KW - conformational exchange UR - https://www.jku.at/fileadmin/gruppen/385/202305-Symposium/BookOfAbstracts.pdf N2 - σ factors of RNA polymerase in bacteria are one of their key components which recognize promotor sequences and initiate transcription [1]. Domain 1.1 of σ A factors occupies the primary channel of RNA polymerase and prevents binding of the σ factor to promoter DNA [2,3]. Here we are presenting a study of domain 1.1 of σ A from the model organism B. subtilis and we are describing its dynamics at μs—ms timescale using detailed study of nuclear magnetic resonance together with its thermal unfolding characterized by optical and calorimetric methods. The results show that the domain 1.1 of σ A factor has natural ability to form a significantly less compact and more flexible state compared to the previously determined structure [4] at biologically relevant temperatures as documented by the secondary structure propensity (SSP) prediction based on the NMR data (Figure 1) and it is shown that even the hydrophobic core of the protein is affected by the transition of the state of the protein. The study is complemented with the functional characterization of the domain 1.1 in dependence on temperature. It clearly showed that the domain 1.1 is responsible for the response of the transcription process to an increase of the temperature supporting our hypothesis that the conformational plasticity of the domain 1.1 affects its ability to entry or exit the primary channel of RNA polymerase and it allows to increase the transcriptional output at higher temperatures. [1] Murakami K.S. and Darst S.A. (2003) Bacterial rna polymerases: the wholo story. Current opinion in structural biology, 13(1):31–39 [2] Bae B., Davis E., Brown D., Campbell E.A., Wigneshweraraj S., and Darst S.A. (2013). Phage t7 gp2 inhibition of escherichia coli rna polymerase involves misappropriation of σ 70 domain 1.1. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 110(49):19772–19777 [3] Murakami K.S. (2013) X-ray crystal structure of Escherichia coli RNA polymerase σ 70 holoenzyme. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 288(13):9126–9134 ER -
TUŽINČIN, Dávid, Petr PADRTA, Hana ŠANDEROVÁ, Alžběta RABATINOVÁ, Kateřina BENDOVÁ, Libor KRÁSNÝ, Lukáš ŽÍDEK and Pavel KADEŘÁVEK. Domain 1.1 of σA factor of RNA polymerase from Bacillus subtilis beyond its major state conformation. In \textit{Inaugural Biochemistry Symposium Puzzles of (Bio)molecular Structure and Dynamics: NMR spectroscopy and complementary approaches.}. 2023.
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