The Origin of Short Transcriptional Pauses

S.M. Depken, E.A. Galburt, S.W. Grill

    Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    Abstract

    RNA polymerases are protein molecular machines that transcribe genetic information from DNA into RNA. The elongation of the RNA molecule is frequently interrupted by pauses, the detailed nature of which remains controversial. Here we ask whether backtracking, the central mechanism behind long pauses, could also be responsible for short pauses normally attributed to the ubiquitous pause state. To this end, we model backtracking as a force-biased random walk, giving rise to a broad distribution of pause durations as observed in experiments. Importantly, we find that this single mechanism naturally generates two populations of pauses that are distinct both in duration and trajectory: long-time pauses with the expected behavior of diffusive backtracks, and a new class of short-time backtracks with characteristics similar to those of the ubiquitous pause. These characteristics include an apparent force insensitivity and immobility of the polymerase. Based on these results and a quantitative comparison to published pause trajectories measured with optical tweezers, we suggest that a significant fraction of short pauses are simply due to backtracking.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)2189-2193
    JournalBiophysical Journal
    Volume96
    Issue number6
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2009

    Bibliographical note

    Depken, Martin Galburt, Eric A. Grill, Stephan W.

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