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Monitoring RNA dynamics in native transcriptional complexes.

Adrien ChauvierPatrick St-PierreJean-François NadonElsa D M HienCibrán Pérez-GonzálezSébastien H EschbachAnne-Marie LamontagneJuan Carlos PenedoDaniel A Lafontaine
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2021)
Cotranscriptional RNA folding is crucial for the timely control of biological processes, but because of its transient nature, its study has remained challenging. While single-molecule Förster resonance energy transfer (smFRET) is unique to investigate transient RNA structures, its application to cotranscriptional studies has been limited to nonnative systems lacking RNA polymerase (RNAP)-dependent features, which are crucial for gene regulation. Here, we present an approach that enables site-specific labeling and smFRET studies of kilobase-length transcripts within native bacterial complexes. By monitoring Escherichia coli nascent riboswitches, we reveal an inverse relationship between elongation speed and metabolite-sensing efficiency and show that pause sites upstream of the translation start codon delimit a sequence hotspot for metabolite sensing during transcription. Furthermore, we demonstrate a crucial role of the bacterial RNAP actively delaying the formation, within the hotspot sequence, of competing structures precluding metabolite binding. Our approach allows the investigation of cotranscriptional regulatory mechanisms in bacterial and eukaryotic elongation complexes.
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