Snyder and Champness Molecular Genetics of Bacteria. Tina M. Henkin

Snyder and Champness Molecular Genetics of Bacteria - Tina M. Henkin


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it has been transcribed from DNA.

      RNA modification, in contrast, involves altering the bases or sugars of RNA. Examples include methylation of the bases or sugars of rRNA (ribosomal RNA) and enzymatic alteration of the bases of tRNA (transfer ribonucleic acid). In eukaryotes, “caps” of methylated nucleotides are added to the 5′ ends of some types of mRNA. In bacteria, mRNAs are not capped, and only the stable rRNAs and tRNAs are extensively modified.

      Transcription is the synthesis of RNA by copying information from a DNA template. The overall processes of transcription are fairly similar in all organisms, but it is best understood in bacteria.

      The transcription of DNA into RNA is carried out by RNA polymerase. In bacteria, the same RNA polymerase makes all the cellular RNAs, including rRNA, tRNA, and mRNA (but excluding the RNA primers used in DNA replication). There are approximately 2,000 molecules of RNA polymerase in each bacterial cell under slow growth conditions, with higher numbers during rapid growth. Only the primer RNAs of Okazaki fragments are made by a different RNA polymerase (primase) during DNA replication. In contrast, eukaryotes have three nuclear RNA polymerases, as well as a mitochondrial RNA polymerase, that make their cellular RNAs.

Schematic illustration of the structure of bacterial RNA polymerase. Schematic illustration of the crystal structure of bacterial RNA polymerase and interactions with promoter DNA.

      Schematic illustration of the RNA transcription. (A) The polymerization reaction, in which incoming nucleoside triphosphates pair with the template strand of DNA during transcription and are joined to generate the RNA chain. (B) The coding strand of the DNA has the same sequence as the mRNA. 0