Studying σ54-dependent transcription at the single-molecule level using alternating-laser excitation (ALEX) spectroscopy
BIOPHOTONICS 2007: OPTICS IN LIFE SCIENCE 6633 (2007) ARTN 66332K
Studying σ^54-dependent transcription at the single-molecule level using alternating-laser excitation (ALEX) spectroscopy
Optica Publishing Group (2007) 6633_92
Initial Transcription by RNA Polymerase Proceeds Through a DNA-Scrunching Mechanism
Science 314 (2006) 1144-1147
Direct observation of abortive initiation and promoter escape within single immobilized transcription complexes.
Biophys J 90:4 (2006) 1419-1431
Abstract:
Using total-internal-reflection fluorescence microscopy equipped with alternating-laser excitation, we were able to detect abortive initiation and promoter escape within single immobilized transcription complexes. Our approach uses fluorescence resonance energy transfer to monitor distances between a fluorescent probe incorporated in RNA polymerase (RNAP) and a fluorescent probe incorporated in DNA. We observe small, but reproducible and abortive-product-length-dependent, decreases in distance between the RNAP leading edge and DNA downstream of RNAP upon abortive initiation, and we observe large decreases in distance upon promoter escape. Inspection of population distributions and single-molecule time traces for abortive initiation indicates that, at a consensus promoter, at saturating ribonucleoside triphosphate concentrations, abortive-product release is rate-limiting (i.e., abortive-product synthesis and RNAP-active-center forward translocation are fast, whereas abortive-product dissociation and RNAP-active-center reverse translocation are slow). The results obtained using this new methodology confirm and extend those obtained from diffusing single molecules, and pave the way for real-time, single-molecule observations of the transitions between various states of the transcription complex throughout transcription.Retention of transcription initiation factor σ70 in transcription elongation: single-molecule analysis
Molecular Cell 20 (2005) 347-356