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The Poliovirus RNA-Dependent RNA polymerase is a 53kDa polymerase which together with other host proteins carries out viral RNA replication on the host cell cytoplasm. The poliovirus RdRp’s shape is common to that of other polymerases, with a palm subdomain which contains a core structure very similar to other polymerases, and different structures of the fingers and thumb from those of other polymerases. The palm subdomain contains four amino acid sequence <scene name='89/891374/Motifs/5'>motifs</scene> of RNA-dependent RNA polymerases, referred to as A, B, C, and D. These fold into a structure that forms the core of the palm subdomain. This core structure consists of two α helices that pack beneath a four-stranded antiparallel β sheet. This same core structure is present in the palm subdomains of all four categories of polymerases. There is a fifth motif, motif E, unique to RNA-dependent polymerases, that pack between the palm and thumb subdomains<ref>Jeffrey L Hansen, Alexander M Long, Steve C Schultz, Structure of the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase of poliovirus, Volume 5, Issue 8, 1997, Pages 1109-1122, ISSN 0969-2126, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0969-2126(97)00261-X (https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S096921269700261X)</ref>.
The Poliovirus RNA-Dependent RNA polymerase is a 53kDa polymerase which together with other host proteins carries out viral RNA replication on the host cell cytoplasm. The poliovirus RdRp’s shape is common to that of other polymerases, with a palm subdomain which contains a core structure very similar to other polymerases, and different structures of the fingers and thumb from those of other polymerases. The palm subdomain contains four amino acid sequence <scene name='89/891374/Motifs/5'>motifs</scene> of RNA-dependent RNA polymerases, referred to as A, B, C, and D. These fold into a structure that forms the core of the palm subdomain. This core structure consists of two α helices that pack beneath a four-stranded antiparallel β sheet. This same core structure is present in the palm subdomains of all four categories of polymerases. There is a fifth motif, motif E, unique to RNA-dependent polymerases, that pack between the palm and thumb subdomains<ref>Jeffrey L Hansen, Alexander M Long, Steve C Schultz, Structure of the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase of poliovirus, Volume 5, Issue 8, 1997, Pages 1109-1122, ISSN 0969-2126, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0969-2126(97)00261-X (https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S096921269700261X)</ref>.
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Motif A of the poliovirus polymerase forms one of the four β strands (β1) of the core structure followed by a short helical turn (αE) at the C-terminal end of the motif. Near the end of the β strand of motif A just preceding the helix is the completely conserved aspartate that has been aligned in all previous sequence and structure comparisons; this residue is expected to coordinate catalytically essential metal ions. There is a highly conserved Asp238 residue in poliovirus polymerase, an aspartate at this position in RNA-dependent RNA polymerases, could favor NTPs over dNTPs, perhaps by interacting directly with the 2′hydroxyl group of an incoming NTP<ref name="123">PMID:15306852</ref>.
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Motif A of the poliovirus polymerase forms one of the four β strands (β1) of the core structure followed by a short helical turn (αE) at the C-terminal end of the motif. Near the end of the β strand of motif A just preceding the helix is the completely conserved aspartate that has been aligned in all previous sequence and structure comparisons; this residue is expected to coordinate catalytically essential metal ions. There is a highly conserved Asp238 residue in poliovirus polymerase, an aspartate at this position in RNA-dependent RNA polymerases, could favor NTPs over dNTPs, perhaps by interacting directly with the 2′hydroxyl group of an incoming NTP<ref name="art1">PMID:15306852</ref>.
Motif B of poliovirus polymerase forms one of two α helices that pack beneath the four-stranded antiparallel β sheet of the polymerase core structure. However, the C-terminal portion of motif B, forms part of a long α helix. A portion of this helix is similarly positioned in all four categories of polymerases: it is in this region that all four motifs come together to form the ‘heart’ of the core structure of the polymerase palm subdomains. In motif B, residue Asn297 hydrogen bonds with the conserved Asp238 of motif A, helping to discriminate between NTPs and dNTPs.
Motif B of poliovirus polymerase forms one of two α helices that pack beneath the four-stranded antiparallel β sheet of the polymerase core structure. However, the C-terminal portion of motif B, forms part of a long α helix. A portion of this helix is similarly positioned in all four categories of polymerases: it is in this region that all four motifs come together to form the ‘heart’ of the core structure of the polymerase palm subdomains. In motif B, residue Asn297 hydrogen bonds with the conserved Asp238 of motif A, helping to discriminate between NTPs and dNTPs.
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== Catalytic site and Elongation of Transcription ==
== Catalytic site and Elongation of Transcription ==
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Different from other RdRps, the poliovirus RdRp does not involve a major nucleotide repositioning step where the nascent template-NTP base pair is moved from a pre-insertion site into the active by a swinging motion of the fingers. Rather active site closure is achieved via initial NTP base-pairing to a fully prepositioned templating nucleotide followed by recognition of the ribose hydroxyl that dives structural changes within the palm domain to enable metal binding and subsequent catalysis. Before transcription, the RdRp adopts a <scene name='89/891374/Closed_conformation/1'>closed conformation</scene> where extensive interactions between the thumb and fingers domain completely encircle the active site and create the <scene name='89/891374/Closed_conformation/2'>NTP entry tunnel</scene> at the back of the polymerase. This is held in place by a clamping structure composed of an extended loop from the pinky finger inserting into the major groove and an α-helix from the thumb domain packing into the opposite minor groove. The complete structure of the RdRp reveals that the very N-terminus of this protein must be buried in a pocket on the back of the fingers domain. This buried terminus stabilizes a structure that directly positions Asp238 for binding with the 2' hydroxyl group of the incoming nucleotide in the active site. When this Asp 238 was mutated to an alanine it abolishes poliovirus polymerase activity and all viral viability. The significance of having an aspartate in this place is that is important for the the <scene name='89/891374/Binding_to_gtp/3'>selection of rNTPs over dNTPs</scene>. The phosphate groups of the NTP are trailing out through the entry tunnel where they interact with conserved basic residues in a structure that appears to select for a complete triphosphate. These are ionic interactions.
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Different from other RdRps, the poliovirus RdRp does not involve a major nucleotide repositioning step where the nascent template-NTP base pair is moved from a pre-insertion site into the active by a swinging motion of the fingers. Rather active site closure is achieved via initial NTP base-pairing to a fully prepositioned templating nucleotide followed by recognition of the ribose hydroxyl that dives structural changes within the palm domain to enable metal binding and subsequent catalysis. Before transcription, the RdRp adopts a <scene name='89/891374/Closed_conformation/1'>closed conformation</scene> where extensive interactions between the thumb and fingers domain completely encircle the active site and create the <scene name='89/891374/Closed_conformation/2'>NTP entry tunnel</scene> at the back of the polymerase<ref name="art1"/>. This is held in place by a clamping structure composed of an extended loop from the pinky finger inserting into the major groove and an α-helix from the thumb domain packing into the opposite minor groove. The complete structure of the RdRp reveals that the very N-terminus of this protein must be buried in a pocket on the back of the fingers domain. This buried terminus stabilizes a structure that directly positions Asp238 for binding with the 2' hydroxyl group of the incoming nucleotide in the active site. When this Asp 238 was mutated to an alanine it abolishes poliovirus polymerase activity and all viral viability. The significance of having an aspartate in this place is that is important for the the <scene name='89/891374/Binding_to_gtp/3'>selection of rNTPs over dNTPs</scene>. The phosphate groups of the NTP are trailing out through the entry tunnel where they interact with conserved basic residues in a structure that appears to select for a complete triphosphate. These are ionic interactions.
<scene name='89/891374/Gdd_active_site/1'>The catalytic site is composed of GDD residues</scene>. There is a proline residue (119) which is 100% conserved and is in the middle of Gly 117 and Gly 124. It was shown that this Pro119 residue is essential for elongation activity in the poliovirus RdRp. This residue is a key conformational change in the pinky finger that locks the enzyme-substrate complex into the stable elongation-competent mode. As the ribose is pulled down into the active site it collides with Asp 238which repositions that residue to interact with Lys61 and Ser288. The NTP 2' hydroxyl group now forms a hydrogen bond with Ser288 and with Asn 297. The net result of this process is a tight network of ribose hydroxyl interactions that positions the NTP for catalysis and also causes a rearrangement of the motif A backbone to form a 3-stranded β-sheet with motif C in the palm domain. more importantly, this realignment causes Asp233 to swing toward the RNA and it now coordinates the Mg2+ ions necessary to complete the active site and enable catalysis. There is a suggested 6 step process for the catalytic cycle of the poliovirus RdRp. The first state is composed of the initial polymerase structure in the absence of a bound NTP. In the second state the loading of the NTP binding site takes place where the nucleotide is bound in the open conformation active site but catalysis has not taken place. In the third state there is a closure of the active site to generate a pre-catalysis state, followed by a post-catalysis fourth state. After catalysis the active site is reset to the open conformation in a post-catalysis and pre-translocation fifth state. Finally a yet not characterized sixth state takes place where its conformation remains unknown and serves as a translocation intermediate.
<scene name='89/891374/Gdd_active_site/1'>The catalytic site is composed of GDD residues</scene>. There is a proline residue (119) which is 100% conserved and is in the middle of Gly 117 and Gly 124. It was shown that this Pro119 residue is essential for elongation activity in the poliovirus RdRp. This residue is a key conformational change in the pinky finger that locks the enzyme-substrate complex into the stable elongation-competent mode. As the ribose is pulled down into the active site it collides with Asp 238which repositions that residue to interact with Lys61 and Ser288. The NTP 2' hydroxyl group now forms a hydrogen bond with Ser288 and with Asn 297. The net result of this process is a tight network of ribose hydroxyl interactions that positions the NTP for catalysis and also causes a rearrangement of the motif A backbone to form a 3-stranded β-sheet with motif C in the palm domain. more importantly, this realignment causes Asp233 to swing toward the RNA and it now coordinates the Mg2+ ions necessary to complete the active site and enable catalysis. There is a suggested 6 step process for the catalytic cycle of the poliovirus RdRp. The first state is composed of the initial polymerase structure in the absence of a bound NTP. In the second state the loading of the NTP binding site takes place where the nucleotide is bound in the open conformation active site but catalysis has not taken place. In the third state there is a closure of the active site to generate a pre-catalysis state, followed by a post-catalysis fourth state. After catalysis the active site is reset to the open conformation in a post-catalysis and pre-translocation fifth state. Finally a yet not characterized sixth state takes place where its conformation remains unknown and serves as a translocation intermediate.

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Poliovirus RNA-Dependent RNA Polymerase

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