pubmed-article:10753887 | pubmed:abstractText | During transcription initiation by Escherichia coli RNA polymerase, a fraction of the homogeneous enzyme population has been kinetically shown to form two types of nonproductive complexes at some promoters: moribund complexes, which produce only abortive transcripts, and fully inactive ternary complexes (Kubori, T., and Shimamoto, N. (1996) J. Mol. Biol. 256, 449-457). Here we report biochemical isolation of the complexes arrested at the lambdaP(R) promoter and an analysis of their structure by DNA and protein footprintings. We found that the isolated promoter-arrested complexes retain a stoichiometric amount of sigma(70) subunit. Exonuclease III footprints of the arrested complexes are backtracked compared with that of the binary complex, and KMnO(4) footprinting reveals a decrease in the melting of DNA in the promoter region. Protein footprints of the retained sigma(70) have shown a more exposed conformation in region 3, compared with binary complexes. This feature is similar to that of the complexes arrested in inactive state during transcription elongation, indicating the existence of a common inactivating mechanism during transcription initiation and elongation. The possible involvement of the promoter arrest in transcriptional regulation is discussed. | lld:pubmed |