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Pretty in Pictures: Details of molecular machinery gain Nobel

Aimee Cunningham

In yeast, the enzyme that transcribes the protein-making instructions encoded in DNA consists of roughly 30,000 atoms. Five years ago, Roger D. Kornberg published a solo portrait and an action shot of this molecular machinery in atomic detail.

Last week, Kornberg, of the Stanford University School of Medicine, was awarded the 2006 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for those images, which were the product of nearly 2 decades of research in his laboratory on the enzyme called RNA polymerase.

Working out the structure of RNA polymerase was "a marvelous achievement," says James T. Kadonaga, a biochemist at the University of California, San Diego. "It's one piece of a much larger puzzle, but an extremely important piece."

The structure of RNA polymerase intrigued Kornberg because this enzyme begins the protein-making process. It copies gene sequences from DNA to create a single-stranded nucleic acid called messenger RNA. Other parts of the cell then use the messenger RNA to direct protein assembly.

To determine the enzyme's structure, Kornberg and his colleagues used RNA polymerase from yeast cells. One of the many challenges in their work, says Kornberg, was developing the procedures to grow sufficient quantities of pure, three-dimensional crystals of RNA polymerase, which is a complex of 12 proteins.

Advances in X-ray crystallography, which the team used to image the enzyme, were also critical. In this technique, a sample scatters X rays that researchers had focused on it. From characteristics of the scatter, a computer creates an image showing the positions of the structure's atoms.

The work of Kornberg's team culminated in 2001 with two publications, one showing inactive RNA polymerase and the other capturing the machinery during the transcription process. The latter image shows how RNA polymerase grasps DNA and how the enzyme chooses the correct building blocks for the messenger RNA. It's a picture that "I regard as one of the most indelible of our work," says Kornberg.

Jeremy M. Berg, director of the National Institute of General Medical Sciences in Bethesda, Md., says, "If you understand the structure and the mechanism of how RNA polymerase works, it will help you understand gene regulation," which in turn is "hugely important" to studies of disease.

The work by Kornberg and others has provided "significant" insights, says Richard H. Ebright of Rutgers University in Piscataway, N.J. He adds, "Most people in our field imagined [a Nobel prize on transcription] would be shared."

"Transcription is a very large field," says Kadonaga. "While I'm really happy for Roger [Kornberg], I also hope there is a place for other people, like Robert Roeder" of Rockefeller University in New York City, who discovered that there are multiple forms of RNA polymerase. "They are very deserving," Kadonaga says.

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Letters:

It is ironic that the father of the current recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry won the prize in medicine. Looking at the research of 2006 winner Roger D. Kornberg, his prize should have been awarded in medicine. For his father, Arthur Kornberg, the prize in 1959 should have been in chemistry. The good news is that they both deserved this prestigious award.

Nelson Marans
Silver Spring, MD

References:

2006. The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2006. Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences/Nobel Foundation press release. Oct. 4. Available at http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/2006/press.html.

Further Readings:

Cramer, P., D.A. Bushnell, and R.D. Kornberg. 2001. Structural basis of transcription: RNA polymerase II at 2.8 Ångstrom resolution. Science 292(June 8):1863-1876. Available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1059493.

Gnatt, A.L. . . . and R.D. Kornberg. 2001. Structural basis of transcription: An RNA polymerase II elongation complex at 3.3 Å resolution. Science 292(June 8):1876-1882. Available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1059495.

For information on this year's chemistry prize winner from the Nobel Foundation, go to http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/2006/.

For further information about the Nobel Foundation and the Nobel prizes, go to http://nobelprize.org.

Sources:

Jeremy M. Berg
National Institute of General Medical Sciences
45 Center Drive
Bethesda, MD 20892-6200

Richard H. Ebright
Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology
Rutgers University
610 Taylor Road
Piscataway, NJ 08854

James T. Kadonaga
Division of Biological Sciences
University of California, San Diego
9500 Gilman Drive #0347
La Jolla, CA 92093-0347

Roger D. Kornberg
Department of Structural Biology
Stanford University School of Medicine
Fairchild D123
Stanford, CA 94305-5126

Danny Reinberg
Department of Biochemistry
New York University School of Medicine
522 First Avenue, 2nd Floor
Room 211
New York, NY 10016


From Science News, Volume 170, No. 16, October 14, 2006, p. 246.