Specificity of Initiation and Synthesis of RNA from DNA Templates

  1. Umadas Maitra,
  2. S. N. Cohen, and
  3. J. Hurwitz
  1. Department of Developmental Biology and Cancer, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York

This extract was created in the absence of an abstract.

Excerpt

The DNA-dependent RNA polymerase reaction in vitro can be thought to proceed in at least three discrete stages: (1) Recognition by the polymerase of specific starting points on DNA template. These starting points on DNA may be in the form of unique nucleotide sequences and/or structurally altered sites at which the enzyme binds to the template to initiate RNA chains. (2) In the second stage the stepwise addition of ribonucleotides to the 3′-hydroxyl group of the ribonucleoside end occurs. In this process the sequence of ribonucleotides incorporated into the RNA chain is directed in a typical Watson-Crick complementary base-pairing fashion by the sequence of bases in the DNA template being transcribed. This growth of RNA chains occurs through the intermediate formation of a tertiary stable complex between DNA-RNA and enzyme (Bremer and Konrad, 1964). The rate of growth of RNA chain in vitro decreases with time until the third stage...

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