RNA polymerase II senses obstruction in the DNA minor groove via a conserved sensor motif

L Xu, W Wang, D Gotte, F Yang… - Proceedings of the …, 2016 - National Acad Sciences
L Xu, W Wang, D Gotte, F Yang, AA Hare, TR Welch, BC Li, JH Shin, J Chong, JN Strathern…
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2016National Acad Sciences
RNA polymerase II (pol II) encounters numerous barriers during transcription elongation,
including DNA strand breaks, DNA lesions, and nucleosomes. Pyrrole-imidazole (Py-Im)
polyamides bind to the minor groove of DNA with programmable sequence specificity and
high affinity. Previous studies suggest that Py-Im polyamides can prevent transcription factor
binding, as well as interfere with pol II transcription elongation. However, the mechanism of
pol II inhibition by Py-Im polyamides is unclear. Here we investigate the mechanism of how …
RNA polymerase II (pol II) encounters numerous barriers during transcription elongation, including DNA strand breaks, DNA lesions, and nucleosomes. Pyrrole-imidazole (Py-Im) polyamides bind to the minor groove of DNA with programmable sequence specificity and high affinity. Previous studies suggest that Py-Im polyamides can prevent transcription factor binding, as well as interfere with pol II transcription elongation. However, the mechanism of pol II inhibition by Py-Im polyamides is unclear. Here we investigate the mechanism of how these minor-groove binders affect pol II transcription elongation. In the presence of site-specifically bound Py-Im polyamides, we find that the pol II elongation complex becomes arrested immediately upstream of the targeted DNA sequence, and is not rescued by transcription factor IIS, which is in contrast to pol II blockage by a nucleosome barrier. Further analysis reveals that two conserved pol II residues in the Switch 1 region contribute to pol II stalling. Our study suggests this motif in pol II can sense the structural changes of the DNA minor groove and can be considered a “minor groove sensor.” Prolonged interference of transcription elongation by sequence-specific minor groove binders may present opportunities to target transcription addiction for cancer therapy.
National Acad Sciences