Protein Domain : IPR020708

Type:  Conserved_site Name:  DNA-directed RNA polymerase, 14-18kDa subunit, conserved site
Description:  DNA-directed RNA polymerases (also known as DNA-dependent RNA polymerases) are responsible for the polymerisation of ribonucleotides into a sequence complementary to the template DNA. In eukaryotes, there are three different forms of DNA-directed RNA polymerases transcribing different sets of genes. Most RNA polymerases are multimeric enzymes and are composed of a variable number of subunits. The core RNA polymerase complex consists of five subunits (two alpha, one beta, one beta-prime and one omega) and is sufficient for transcription elongation and termination but is unable to initiate transcription. Transcription initiation from promoter elements requires a sixth, dissociable subunit called a sigma factor, which reversibly associates with the core RNA polymerase complex to form a holoenzyme []. The core RNA polymerase complex forms a "crab claw"-like structure with an internal channel running along the full length []. The key functional sites of the enzyme, as defined by mutational and cross-linking analysis, are located on the inner wall of this channel.RNA synthesis follows after the attachment of RNA polymerase to a specific site, the promoter, on the template DNA strand. The RNA synthesis process continues until a termination sequence is reached. The RNA product, which is synthesised in the 5' to 3'direction, is known as the primary transcript. Eukaryotic nuclei contain three distinct types of RNA polymerases that differ in the RNA they synthesise:RNA polymerase I: located in the nucleoli, synthesises precursors of most ribosomal RNAs.RNA polymerase II: occurs in the nucleoplasm, synthesises mRNA precursors. RNA polymerase III: also occurs in the nucleoplasm, synthesises the precursors of 5S ribosomal RNA, the tRNAs, and a variety of other small nuclear and cytosolic RNAs. Eukaryotic cells are also known to contain separate mitochondrial and chloroplast RNA polymerases. Eukaryotic RNA polymerases, whose molecular masses vary in size from 500 to 700 kDa, contain two non-identical large (>100 kDa) subunits and an array of up to 12 different small (less than 50 kDa) subunits.A component of 14 to 18 kDa shared by all three forms of eukaryotic RNA polymerases and which has been sequenced in budding yeast (gene RPB6 or RPO26), in fission yeast (gene rpb6 or rpo15), in human and in African swine fever virus(ASFV) [] is evolutionary related [] to archaeal subunit K (generpoK). The archaeal protein is colinear with the C-terminal part of the eukaryotic subunit. Short Name:  DNA-dir_RNA_polK_14-18kDa_CS

0 Child Features

0 Contains

1 Cross References

Identifier
PS01111

3 Found Ins

DB identifier Type Name
IPR006110 Family RNA polymerase, subunit omega/K/RPB6
IPR006111 Family Archaeal RpoK/eukaryotic RPB6 RNA polymerase subunit
IPR012293 Domain RNA polymerase subunit, RPB6/omega

3 GO Annotations

GO Term Gene Name
GO:0003677 IPR020708
GO:0003899 IPR020708
GO:0006351 IPR020708

3 Ontology Annotations

GO Term Gene Name
GO:0003677 IPR020708
GO:0003899 IPR020708
GO:0006351 IPR020708

0 Parent Features

0 Proteins

4 Publications

First Author Title Year Journal Volume Pages PubMed ID
            8045907
            3052291
            10499798
            8332503