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Dive into the research topics where Murali Palangat is active.

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Featured researches published by Murali Palangat.


Nature | 2007

Structural basis for substrate loading in bacterial RNA polymerase

Dmitry G. Vassylyev; Marina N. Vassylyeva; Jinwei Zhang; Murali Palangat; Irina Artsimovitch; Robert Landick

Water is predicted to be among, if not the most abundant molecular species after hydrogen in the atmospheres of close-in extrasolar giant planets (hot-Jupiters) Several attempts have been made to detect water on an exoplanet, but have failed to find compelling evidence for it or led to claims that should be taken with caution. Here we report an analysis of recent observations of the hot-Jupiter HD189733b taken during the transit, where the planet passed in front of its parent star. We find that absorption by water vapour is the most likely cause of the wavelength-dependent variations in the effective radius of the planet at the infrared wavelengths 3.6, 5.8 and 8 microns. The larger effective radius observed at visible wavelengths may be due to either star variability or the presence of clouds/hazes. We explain the most recent thermal infrared observations of the planet during secondary transit behind the star, reporting a non-detection of water on HD189733b, as being a consequence of the nearly isothermal vertical profile of the planet.s atmosphere. Our results show that water is detectable on extrasolar planets using the primary transit technique and that the infrared should be a better wavelength region than the visible, for such searches.The mechanism of substrate loading in multisubunit RNA polymerase is crucial for understanding the general principles of transcription yet remains hotly debated. Here we report the 3.0-Å resolution structures of the Thermus thermophilus elongation complex (EC) with a non-hydrolysable substrate analogue, adenosine-5′-[(α,β)-methyleno]-triphosphate (AMPcPP), and with AMPcPP plus the inhibitor streptolydigin. In the EC/AMPcPP structure, the substrate binds to the active (‘insertion’) site closed through refolding of the trigger loop (TL) into two α-helices. In contrast, the EC/AMPcPP/streptolydigin structure reveals an inactive (‘preinsertion’) substrate configuration stabilized by streptolydigin-induced displacement of the TL. Our structural and biochemical data suggest that refolding of the TL is vital for catalysis and have three main implications. First, despite differences in the details, the two-step preinsertion/insertion mechanism of substrate loading may be universal for all RNA polymerases. Second, freezing of the preinsertion state is an attractive target for the design of novel antibiotics. Last, the TL emerges as a prominent target whose refolding can be modulated by regulatory factors.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2010

Role of the RNA polymerase trigger loop in catalysis and pausing.

Jinwei Zhang; Murali Palangat; Robert Landick

The trigger loop (TL) is a polymorphous component of RNA polymerase (RNAP) that makes direct substrate contacts and promotes nucleotide addition when folded into an α-helical hairpin (trigger helices, TH). However, the roles of the TL/TH in transcript cleavage, catalysis, substrate selectivity and pausing remain ill defined. Based on in vitro assays of Escherichia coli RNAP bearing specific TL/TH alterations, we report that neither intrinsic nor regulator-assisted transcript cleavage of backtracked RNA requires formation of the TH. We find that the principal contribution of TH formation to rapid nucleotidyl transfer is steric alignment of the reactants rather than acid-base catalysis, and that the TL/TH cannot be the sole contributor to substrate selectivity. The similar effects of TL/TH substitutions on pausing and nucleotide addition provide additional support for the view that TH formation is rate-limiting for escape from nonbacktracked pauses.


Molecular Cell | 1998

Transcriptional Pausing at +62 of the HIV-1 Nascent RNA Modulates Formation of the TAR RNA Structure

Murali Palangat; Timothy I. Meier; Richard G. Keene; Robert Landick

A strong transcriptional pause delays human RNA polymerase II three nt after the last potentially paired base in HIV-1 TAR, the RNA structure that binds the transactivator protein Tat. We report here that the HIV-1 pause depends in part on an alternative RNA structure (the HIV-1 pause hairpin) that competes with formation of TAR. By probing the nascent RNA structure in halted transcription complexes, we found that the transcript folds as the pause hairpin before and at the pause, and rearranges to TAR concurrent with or just after escape from the pause. The pause signal triggers a 2 nt reverse translocation by RNA polymerase that may block the active site and be counteracted by formation of TAR. Thus, the HIV-1 pause site modulates nascent RNA rearrangement from a structure that favors pausing to one that both recruits Tat and promotes escape from the pause.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Trigger loop dynamics mediate the balance between the transcriptional fidelity and speed of RNA polymerase II

Matthew H. Larson; Jing Zhou; Craig D. Kaplan; Murali Palangat; Roger D. Kornberg; Robert Landick; Steven M. Block

During transcription, RNA polymerase II (RNAPII) must select the correct nucleotide, catalyze its addition to the growing RNA transcript, and move stepwise along the DNA until a gene is fully transcribed. In all kingdoms of life, transcription must be finely tuned to ensure an appropriate balance between fidelity and speed. Here, we used an optical-trapping assay with high spatiotemporal resolution to probe directly the motion of individual RNAPII molecules as they pass through each of the enzymatic steps of transcript elongation. We report direct evidence that the RNAPII trigger loop, an evolutionarily conserved protein subdomain, serves as a master regulator of transcription, affecting each of the three main phases of elongation, namely: substrate selection, translocation, and catalysis. Global fits to the force-velocity relationships of RNAPII and its trigger loop mutants support a Brownian ratchet model for elongation, where the incoming NTP is able to bind in either the pre- or posttranslocated state, and movement between these two states is governed by the trigger loop. Comparison of the kinetics of pausing by WT and mutant RNAPII under conditions that promote base misincorporation indicate that the trigger loop governs fidelity in substrate selection and mismatch recognition, and thereby controls aspects of both transcriptional accuracy and rate.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Direct Versus Limited-step Reconstitution Reveals Key Features of an RNA Hairpin-stabilized Paused Transcription Complex

Scotty Kyzer; Kook Sun Ha; Robert Landick; Murali Palangat

We have identified minimal nucleic acid scaffolds capable of reconstituting hairpin-stabilized paused transcription complexes when incubated with RNAP either directly or in a limited step reconstitution assay. Direct reconstitution was achieved using a 29-nucleotide (nt) RNA whose 3′-proximal 9–10 nt pair to template DNA within an 11-nt noncomplementary bubble of a 39-bp duplex DNA; the 5′-proximal 18 nt of RNA forms the his pause RNA hairpin. Limited-step reconstitution was achieved on the same DNAs using a 27-nt RNA that can be 3′-labeled during reconstitution and then extended 2 nt past the pause site to assay transcriptional pausing. Paused complexes formed by either method recapitulated key features of a promoter-initiated, hairpin-stabilized paused complex, including a slow rate of pause escape, resistance to transcript cleavage and pyrophosphorolysis, and enhancement of pausing by the elongation factor NusA. These findings establish that RNA upstream from the pause hairpin and pyrophosphate are not essential for pausing and for NusA action. Reconstitution of the his paused transcription complex provides a valuable tool for future studies of protein-nucleic interactions involved in transcriptional pausing.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2011

The RPB2 Flap Loop of Human RNA Polymerase II Is Dispensable for Transcription Initiation and Elongation

Murali Palangat; Jeffrey A. Grass; Marie-France Langelier; Benoit Coulombe; Robert Landick

ABSTRACT The flap domain of multisubunit RNA polymerases (RNAPs), also called the wall, forms one side of the RNA exit channel. In bacterial RNAP, the mobile part of the flap is called the flap tip and makes essential contacts with initiation and elongation factors. Cocrystal structures suggest that the orthologous part of eukaryotic RNAPII, called the flap loop, contacts transcription factor IIB (TFIIB), but the function of the flap loop has not been assessed. We constructed and tested a deletion of the flap loop in human RNAPII (subunit RPB2 Δ873-884) that removes the flap loop interaction interface with TFIIB. Genome-wide analysis of the distribution of the RNAPII with the flap loop deletion expressed in a human embryonic kidney cell line (HEK 293) revealed no effect of the flap loop on global transcription initiation, RNAPII occupancy within genes, or the efficiency of promoter escape and productive elongation. In vitro, the flap loop deletion had no effect on promoter binding, abortive initiation or promoter escape, TFIIS-stimulated transcript cleavage, or inhibition of transcript elongation by the complex of negative elongation factor (NELF) and 5,6-dichloro-1-β-d-ribofuranosylbenzimidazole (DRB) sensitivity-inducing factor (DSIF). A modest effect on transcript elongation and pausing was suppressed by TFIIF. Although similar to the flap tip of bacterial RNAP, the RNAPII flap loop is not equivalently essential.


Transcription | 2012

Efficient reconstitution of transcription elongation complexes for single-molecule studies of eukaryotic RNA polymerase II

Murali Palangat; Matthew H. Larson; Xiaopeng Hu; Averell Gnatt; Steven M. Block; Robert Landick

Single-molecule studies of RNA polymerase II (RNAP II) require high yields of transcription elongation complexes (TECs) with long DNA tethers upstream and downstream of the TEC. Here we report on a robust system to reconstitute both yeast and mammalian RNAP II with an efficiency of ~80% into TECs that elongate with an efficiency of ~90%, followed by rapid, high-efficiency tripartite ligation of long DNA fragments upstream and downstream of the reconstituted TECs. Single mammalian and yeast TECs reconstituted with this method have been successfully used in an optical-trapping transcription assay capable of applying forces that either assist or hinder transcript elongation.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

Trigger-helix folding pathway and SI3 mediate catalysis and hairpin-stabilized pausing by Escherichia coli RNA polymerase

Tricia A. Windgassen; Rachel A. Mooney; Dhananjaya Nayak; Murali Palangat; Jinwei Zhang; Robert Landick

The conformational dynamics of the polymorphous trigger loop (TL) in RNA polymerase (RNAP) underlie multiple steps in the nucleotide addition cycle and diverse regulatory mechanisms. These mechanisms include nascent RNA hairpin-stabilized pausing, which inhibits TL folding into the trigger helices (TH) required for rapid nucleotide addition. The nascent RNA pause hairpin forms in the RNA exit channel and promotes opening of the RNAP clamp domain, which in turn stabilizes a partially folded, paused TL conformation that disfavors TH formation. We report that inhibiting TH unfolding with a disulfide crosslink slowed multiround nucleotide addition only modestly but eliminated hairpin-stabilized pausing. Conversely, a substitution that disrupts the TH folding pathway and uncouples establishment of key TH–NTP contacts from complete TH formation and clamp movement allowed rapid catalysis and eliminated hairpin-stabilized pausing. We also report that the active-site distal arm of the TH aids TL folding, but that a 188-aa insertion in the Escherichia coli TL (sequence insertion 3; SI3) disfavors TH formation and stimulates pausing. The effect of SI3 depends on the jaw domain, but not on downstream duplex DNA. Our results support the view that both SI3 and the pause hairpin modulate TL folding in a constrained pathway of intermediate states.


Molecular Cell | 2007

A Central Role of the RNA Polymerase Trigger Loop in Active-Site Rearrangement during Transcriptional Pausing

Innokenti Toulokhonov; Jinwei Zhang; Murali Palangat; Robert Landick


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2001

Roles of RNA:DNA hybrid stability, RNA structure, and active site conformation in pausing by human RNA polymerase II

Murali Palangat; Robert Landick

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Robert Landick

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Jinwei Zhang

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Antoine Coulon

National Institutes of Health

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Carson C. Chow

National Institutes of Health

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Daniel R. Larson

National Institutes of Health

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