Abstract
Transcription of the Mu mom operon requires activation by the phage gene product, C, a site-specific DNA binding protein. Previous in vivo and in vitro footprinting studies showed that Escherichia coli RNA polymerase (Esigma70=RNAP) bound the wild-type (wt) mom promoter (Pmom) region in the absence of C; this site, now designated momP2 (-11 to -64), is slightly upstream of, but overlapping with, momP1 (+16 to -49), the functional binding site for mom operon (rightward) transcription. The location/distribution of KMnO4-sensitive sites on the two DNA strands suggested that RNAP bound at momP2 was in an open-complex, but that transcription was in the opposite direction. Here, we used both runoff transcription and reverse transcriptase-primer extension sequencing to provide direct evidence that in the absence of C protein, RNAP carries out leftward transcription from momP2 both in vitro and in vivo. In addition, the 5' ends of these transcripts were mapped to the same upstream initiation site, -58G, relative to the initiation site of C-activated rightward transcription. We also present evidence that leftward transcription from momP2 requires RNAP recognition of an UP-element by the carboxyl-terminal domain of the alpha subunit.
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