Nascent RNA length dictates opposing effects of NusA on antitermination.

Nucleic Acids Res

Department of Microbiology and Immunobiology, Boston, MA 02115, USA

Published: June 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • NusA is a key transcription elongation factor in bacteria that aids in both intrinsic termination and the function of bacteriophage λ antiterminator proteins, creating a dual role that is not fully understood.
  • Nascent RNA length significantly influences NusA's collaborative effects, with NusA supporting the Q protein engagement during early transcription elongation but having an antagonistic role when RNA is longer than typically associated with the transcription elongation complex.
  • Findings suggest that modifying nascent RNA lengths can alter NusA's function, providing insights into its variable roles in transcription regulation and antitermination.

Article Abstract

The NusA protein is a universally conserved bacterial transcription elongation factor that binds RNA polymerase (RNAP). When functioning independently, NusA enhances intrinsic termination. Paradoxically, NusA stimulates the function of the N and Q antiterminator proteins of bacteriophage λ. The mechanistic basis for NusA's functional plasticity is poorly understood. Here we uncover an effect of nascent RNA length on the ability of NusA to collaborate with Q. Ordinarily, Q engages RNAP during early elongation when it is paused at a specific site just downstream of the phage late-gene promoter. NusA facilitates this engagement process and both proteins remain associated with the transcription elongation complex (TEC) as it escapes the pause and transcribes the late genes. We show that the λ-related phage 82 Q protein (82Q) can also engage RNAP that is paused at a promoter-distal position and thus contains a nascent RNA longer than that associated with the natively positioned TEC. However, the effect of NusA in this context is antagonistic rather than stimulatory. Moreover, cleaving the long RNA associated with the promoter-distal TEC restores NusA's stimulatory effect. Our findings reveal a critical role for nascent RNA in modulating NusA's effect on 82Q-mediated antitermination, with implications for understanding NusA's functional plasticity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4914094PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkw198DOI Listing

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