Recognition of phosphorylated threonine-4 of RNA polymerase II C-terminal domain by 3 '-end processing apparatus
2016
Phosphorylation patterns of the C-terminal domain (CTD) of
largest subunit of RNA polymerase II (called the CTD code)
orchestrate the recruitment of RNA processing and transcription
factors. Recent studies showed that not only serines and
tyrosines but also threonines of the CTD can be phosphorylated
with a number of functional consequences, including the
interaction with yeast transcription termination factor,
Rtt103p. Here, we report the solution structure of the Rtt103p
CTD-interacting domain (CID) bound to Thr4 phosphorylated CTD,
a poorly understood letter of the CTD code. The structure
reveals a direct recognition of the phospho-Thr4 mark by
Rtt103p CID and extensive interactions involving residues from
three repeats of the CTD heptad. Intriguingly, Rtt103p's CID
binds equally well Thr4 and Ser2 phosphorylated CTD A doubly
phosphorylated CTD at Ser2 and Thr4 diminishes its binding
affinity due to electrostatic repulsion. Our structural data
suggest that the recruitment of a CID-containing CTD-binding
factor may be coded by more than one letter of the CTD code.
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