[No authors listed]
Ï factors are single subunit general transcription factors that reversibly bind core RNA polymerase and mediate gene-specific transcription in bacteria. Previously, an atypical two-subunit Ï factor was identified that activates transcription from a group of related promoters in Bacillus subtilis. Both of the subunits, named SigO and RsoA, share primary sequence similarity with the canonical Ï70 family of Ï factors and interact with each other and with RNA polymerase subunits. Here we show that the Ï70 region 2.3-like segment of RsoA is unexpectedly sufficient for interaction with the amino-terminus of SigO and the β' subunit. A mutational analysis of RsoA identified aromatic residues conserved amongst all RsoA homologues, and often amongst canonical Ï factors, that are particularly important for the SigO-RsoA interaction. In a canonical Ï factor, region 2.3 amino acids bind non-template strand DNA, trapping the promoter in a single-stranded state required for initiation of transcription. Accordingly, we speculate that RsoA region 2.3 protein-binding activity likely arose from a motif that, at least in its ancestral protein, participated in DNA-binding interactions.
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