- Prokaryotic transcription
Prokaryotic transcription is the process in which
messenger RNA transcripts of genetic material inprokaryote s are produced, to be translated for the production ofprotein s. Prokaryotic transcription occurs in thecytoplasm alongside translation. Unlike ineukaryotes , prokaryotic transcription and translation can occur simultaneously. This is impossible in eukaryotes, where transcription occurs in a membrane-bound nucleus while translation occurs outside the nucleus in the cytoplasm. In prokaryotes genetic material is not enclosed in a membrane-enclosed nucleus and has access toribosome s in the cytoplasm. [Benjamin Lewin. "Essential genes"] ["Oxford dictionary of biology."]Initiation
The following steps occur, in order, for transcription initiation:
* RNA polymerase (RNAP ) binds to one of several specificity factors, σ, to form aholoenzyme . In this form, it can recognize and bind to specificpromoter regions in the DNA. At this stage, the DNA is double-stranded ("closed"). This holoenzyme/wound-DNA structure is referred to as the "closed complex".
* The DNA is unwound and becomes single-stranded ("open") in the vicinity of the initiation site (defined as +1). This holoenzyme/unwound-DNA structure is called the "open complex".
* The RNA polymerase transcribes the DNA, but produces about 10 abortive (short, non-productive) transcripts which are unable to leave the RNA polymerase because the exit channel is blocked by the σ-factor.
* The σ-factor eventually dissociates from the holoenzyme, and elongation proceeds.Promoters can differ in "strength"; that is, how actively they promote transcription of their adjacent DNA sequence. Promoter strength is in many (but not all) cases, a matter of how tightly RNA polymerase and its associated accessory proteins bind to their respective DNA sequences. The more similar the sequences are to a
consensus sequence , the stronger the binding is. Additional transcription regulation comes fromtranscription factors that can affect the stability of the holoenzyme structure at initiation.Most transcripts originate using adenosine-5'-triphosphate (ATP) and, to a lesser extent, guanosine-5'-triphosphate (GTP) (
purine nucleoside triphosphates) at the +1 site. Uridine-5'-triphosphate (UTP) and cytidine-5'-triphosphate (CTP) (pyrimidine nucleoside triphosphates) are disfavoured at the initiation site.Termination
Two termination mechanisms are well known:
*Intrinsic termination (also calledRho-independent transcription termination ) involves terminator sequences within the RNA that signal the RNA polymerase to stop. The terminator sequence is usually a palindromic sequence that forms a stem-loop hairpin structure that leads to the dissociation of the RNAP from the DNA template.*Rho-dependent termination uses a
termination factor called ρ factor(rho factor) which is a protein to stop RNA synthesis at specific sites. This protein binds at a rho ultilisation site on the nascent RNA strand and runs along the mRNA towards the RNAP. A stem loop structure upstream of the terminator region pauses the RNAP, when ρ-factor reaches the RNAP, it causes RNAP to dissociate from the DNA, terminating transcription.Other termination mechanisms include where RNAP comes across a region with repetitious thymidine residues in the DNA template, or where a GC-rich inverted repeat followed by 4 A residues. The inverted repeat forms a stable stem loop structure in the RNA, which causes the RNA to dissociate from the DNA template.
The -35 region and the -10 ("
Pribnow box ") region comprise the basic prokaryotic "promoter ", and |T| stands for the "terminator". The DNA on the template strand between the +1 site and the terminator is transcribed into RNA, which is then translated intoprotein .."'References
External links
* [http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/dl/free/0072835125/126997/animation21.html Prokaryotic Transcription] - animation
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