RNA_pol_A_CTD

RNA_pol_A_CTD
PFAM accession number:PF03118
Interpro abstract (IPR011260):

The core of the bacterial RNA polymerase (RNAP) consists of four subunits, two alpha, a beta and a beta', which are conserved from bacteria to mammals. The alpha subunit (RpoA) initiates RNAP assembly by dimerising to form a platform on which the beta subunits can interact. The alpha subunit consists of a N-terminal domain (NTD) and a C-terminal domain (CTD), connected by a short linker. The NTD is essential for RNAP assembly, while the CTD is necessary for transcription regulation, interacting with transcription factors and promoter upstream elements. In Escherichia coli, the catabolite activator protein (CAP or CRP) was shown to exert its effect through its interactions with the CTD, where CAP binding to CTD promotes RNAP binding to promoter DNA, thereby stimulating transcription initiation at class I CAP-dependent promoters. At class II CAP-dependent promoters, the interaction of CAP with CTD is one of multiple interactions involved in activation [ (PUBMED:12202833) ].

The CTD has a compact structure of four helices and two long arms enclosing its hydrophobic core, making its folding topology distinct from most other binding proteins. The upstream promoter element-binding site is formed from helices 1 and 4 [ (PUBMED:7491496) ].

GO process:transcription, DNA-templated (GO:0006351)
GO function:DNA-directed 5'-3' RNA polymerase activity (GO:0003899), DNA binding (GO:0003677)

This is a PFAM domain. For full annotation and more information, please see the PFAM entry RNA_pol_A_CTD