Biochemical Analysis of Yeast Suppressor of Ty 4/5 (Spt4/5) Reveals the Importance of Nucleic Acid Interactions in the Prevention of RNA Polymerase II Arrest*♦

RNA polymerase II (RNAPII) undergoes structural changes during the transitions from initiation, elongation, and termination, which are aided by a collection of proteins called elongation factors. NusG/Spt5 is the only elongation factor conserved in all domains of life. Although much information exists about the interactions between NusG/Spt5 and RNA polymerase in prokaryotes, little is known about how the binding of eukaryotic Spt4/5 affects the biochemical activities of RNAPII. We characterized the activities of Spt4/5 and interrogated the structural features of Spt5 required for it to interact with elongation complexes, bind nucleic acids, and promote transcription elongation. The eukaryotic specific regions of Spt5 containing the Kyrpides, Ouzounis, Woese domains are involved in stabilizing the association with the RNAPII elongation complex, which also requires the presence of the nascent transcript. Interestingly, we identify a region within the conserved NusG N-terminal (NGN) domain of Spt5 that contacts the non-template strand of DNA both upstream of RNAPII and in the transcription bubble. Mutating charged residues in this region of Spt5 did not prevent Spt4/5 binding to elongation complexes, but abrogated the cross-linking of Spt5 to DNA and the anti-arrest properties of Spt4/5, thus suggesting that contact between Spt5 (NGN) and DNA is required for Spt4/5 to promote elongation. We propose that the mechanism of how Spt5/NGN promotes elongation is fundamentally conserved; however, the eukaryotic specific regions of the protein evolved so that it can serve as a platform for other elongation factors and maintain its association with RNAPII as it navigates genomes packaged into chromatin.

The conversion of DNA to RNA is a fundamental aspect of all life, and this process is carried out by RNA polymerases (RNAPs). 2 These enzymatic powerhouses must maintain both high levels of fidelity and processivity over long distances to ensure that RNAs are accurately produced on a time scale amenable to life. Families of proteins called elongation factors have evolved to assist RNA polymerases during transcription elongation. The oldest and most conserved of these factors is the NusG/suppressor of Ty element (Spt) 5 family (1,2). NusG is the eubacterial version of Spt5 and functions as a single polypeptide; however, archaea and eukaryotic Spt5 associate with an additional small protein, Spt4. In yeast, SPT5 is essential, but SPT4 is not. Deleting the gene encoding Spt4 impairs elongation, transcription-coupled repair, and mRNA processing (2)(3)(4)(5). Some of the functions of Spt4 may be partially dependent on its ability to prevent degradation of Spt5 in cells (4).
The NusG/Spt5 family of proteins has been shown to enhance RNA polymerase transcription elongation in all domains of life (6 -10). NusG regulates RNAP activity by stabilizing the post-translocated state thereby inhibiting backtracking and reducing long lifetime pauses (6,11). The NusG homolog RfaH has also been implicated in regulating movement of the RNAP bridge helix suggesting that NusG and RfaH may function to alter RNAP conformational dynamics (6,12). In fact, the movement of the trigger loop and bridge helix in the active site is a fundamental process in nucleotide incorporation and regulates arrest of active elongation complexes in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes (12)(13)(14)(15). In prokaryotes, the movement of the trigger loop and bridge helix is linked to the formation of RNA hairpins, which regulate RNAP pausing (13,16,17). Although this method of pausing is not known to exist in eukaryotes, x-ray crystal structures of yeast RNAPII in different stages of elongation have generated a model in which the movement of the bridge helix and trigger loop can be coupled to translocation through the non-template strand of DNA (18). This information implies that the nucleic acid scaffold is critical in maintaining active RNAP during elongation.
Using a combination of crystal structures, cryo-EM, and model building of archaeal Spt4/5 bound to RNAP, it has been proposed that Spt4/5 closes the "crab claw"-like clamp of RNAP (8,10) by binding across the jaws and interacting with a coiledcoil domain of RpoA (7). This binding may prevent the dissoci-ation of the RNA polymerase from the template by encircling DNA and enhancing processivity (7, 8,10). "Bridging" of the two lobes of RNAP occurs through the universally conserved NGN domain (NusG N-terminal region), and all known biomechanical properties of Spt5 are linked to this domain (1,7,19,20).
Much of what we know about the biochemical activities of eukaryotic Spt4/5 arose from its identification as the DRB-sensitive inducing factor (DSIF) in HeLa cell extracts and was later found to be required to stably pause RNAPII in promoter proximal regions (9,21). In this latter case, DSIF acts as a negative elongation factor working with the negative elongation factor (22). Conversion to a positive elongation factor requires the phosphorylation of Spt5 by positive transcription elongation factor b (P-TEFb) (23). Human Spt5 suppresses the arrest of RNAPII at poly(A) tracts (24), and the zebrafish version of Spt5 stimulated transcription elongation in extracts (25). In these two examples, eukaryotic Spt4/5 has been shown to function in a positive manner to support transcription elongation. Because the ability to induce promoter proximal pausing is unique to higher eukaryotes, much of the focus to understand DSIF function has been carried out in metazoans using depleted extracts or crude fractions. What is lacking is a highly defined biochemical reconstitution system to study eukaryotic Spt4/5 that can provide a deeper mechanistic understanding of how it affects RNAPII activity and promotes elongation. Studying yeast Spt4/5 provides an opportunity to understand the positive effect of Spt4/5 on transcription elongation, as yeast lacks promoter proximal pausing. Furthermore, genetic assays indicate that Spt4/5 functions in a purely positive function (3,26,27).
In prokaryotes, NusG of eubacteria and Spt4/5 from archaea bind to RNAP (7,20). However, the association between fly and human DSIF and RNAPII is facilitated by the emergence of the nascent transcript (28,29). Eukaryotic Spt5 contains an extended C terminus containing five Kyrpides, Ouzounis, Woese (KOW) domains that theoretically can reach anywhere on the surface of RNAPII. KOW domains are generally part of larger Tudor domains that are known to interact with nucleic acids (30,31). In fact, a crystal structure of an isolated KOW1linker (K1L1) fragment of Spt5 and biochemical analysis using isolated K1L1 provided evidence that it binds to nucleic acids (32). Furthermore, in vivo cross-linking data conducted on yeast Spt5 revealed that KOW domains 4 and 5 interact with surfaces on RNAPII, including the Rpb4/7 sub-module. Although more information is being gained on the functions of these KOW domains, how they affect RNAPII binding and activity is not clear. Eukaryotic Spt5 also contains an extended intrinsically disordered modifiable C-terminal region (CTR) that has been shown to be phosphorylated during transcription, which in turn recruits elongation and RNA-processing factors (4,(33)(34)(35)(36)(37). This raised the possibility that the elongation activity associated with Spt5 may have been delegated to other elongation factors during the course of evolution. The CTR of Spt5 does not contribute to the essential function of the protein because a CTR-less mutant of Spt5 is viable and displays minor phenotypes (36,37); however, systematic deletion of KOW domains and the linker regions of Spt5 in yeast are lethal and result in reduced affinity for both RNAPI and RNAPII (38). Spt4/5 likely associates with several regions of RNAPII and nucleic acids in the elongation complex. The consequences of these interactions with polymerase are not well understood. We show that the emerging RNA transcript is critical for the binding of yeast Spt4/5 to the elongation complex. Additionally, eukaryotic specific regions of Spt5 are required for stable binding to RNAPII elongation complexes. Furthermore, we provide direct evidence that interaction of the NGN domain of Spt5 with the non-template strand of DNA in the elongation complex is required for Spt4/5 to promote elongation. Together, these findings suggest a eukaryotic specific mode of binding to polymerase but a universally conserved mechanism of action to promote elongation. It also suggests an elongation promoting activity for Spt4/5 different from its ability to encircle the DNA and retain RNAP on DNA.

Experimental Procedures
Plasmid Construction-The coding sequences of SPT4 and SPT5 were amplified by PCR from genomic DNA with primers that introduced BamHI and BsrGI or BamHI and NgoMIV sites into the ends, respectively. The products were then ligated into the shuttle vectors pST50-N-term-Strep tag (39) and pST66-Cterminal His 6 tag. The expression modules were then excised using unique restriction sites and ligated into the pST69 co-expression plasmid (a kind gift from Song Tan). Details are available upon request. The SPT5-HA 3 sequence was amplified by PCR from pHQ1494 (a kind gift from Allen Hinnebusch) and then inserted into pRS313 plasmids using the In-fusion cloning method (Clontech). Mutations were constructed using the Infusion mutagenesis procedure. Constructs were confirmed by sequencing.
Yeast Strains-Homologous recombination was used to fuse the FRB sequences in-frame with the endogenous SPT5 coding sequence in the anchor-away strain Y40343 (Euroscarf) as described previously (40). The strain, JR1734, genotype is MAT␣ tor1-1 fpr1::NAT RPL13A-2xFKBP12::TRP1 SPT5xFRB::KANMX. Spotting of strains was performed by growing yeast cells transformed with pRS313 containing SPT5-HA 3 , and its mutant derivatives, to an OD of 1.0 and then spotting 10-fold serial dilutions onto synthetic media (ϪHIS) plates Ϯ1 g/ml rapamycin. For preparing extracts for Western blotting, cells were grown to an A 600 of 0.7-0.8; rapamycin was added to 1 g/ml, and after 1.5 h the cells were harvested, and whole cell extracts were prepared using the trichloroacetic acid method (41). Whole cell extract was then run on SDS-PAGE and subjected to Western blotting with anti-HA (Pierce) or anti-H2B (Active Motif) antibodies. Signals were detected using chemiluminescence detected on x-ray film.
Elongation Complex Reconstitution and Runoff Experiments-DNA templates for EC42 runoff experiments were prepared by annealing two chemically synthesized oligos corresponding to the non-template and template strands, producing a template with a 3Ј overhang. The DNA template was gelpurified. The sequences are as follows: EC42 template strand, 5Ј-GCCACCGCGGTCTAGAGGATCCCCGGGAGTGG-AATGAGAAATGAGTGTGAAGATAGAGGAGAGATCA-AAAAAATTA-3Ј, and EC42 non-template strand, 5Ј-CTC-CTCTATCTTCACACTCATTTCTCATTCCACTCCCGGG-GATCCTCTAGACCGCGGTGGC-3Ј. EC70 templates were prepared using a PCR and tail ligation strategy (28,43,44) Elongation complexes (ECs) were formed as described previously (28,43,44). Briefly, reactions were formed in 15 l of transcription buffer (50 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, 100 mM KCl, 1 mM MnCl 2 , and 0.5 mM DTT, 10% glycerol, 0.5 mM UpG, 20 units of RNasin (Promega), 100 ng/l BSA). Approximately 150 fmol of RNAPII was pre-incubated with DNA template, and then 5 l of 0.1 mM ATP, 0.1 mM CTP, 0.005 mM UTP, and 8 Ci of [␣-32 P]UTP(6000 Ci/mmol) was added. For the anti-arrest assays, ECs were formed on EC42 templates in the presence of 0.1 mM ATP, 0.1 mM CTP, 0.005 mM UTP, and 8 Ci of [␣-32 P]UTP (6000 Ci/mmol) for 2.5 min, and then Spt4/5 was added to the reaction along with 100 M UTP and 250 ng/l salmon sperm DNA. ECs were then incubated for 5, 7.5, 10, and 20 min. After each time point, ECs were chased with 100 M ATP, CTP, and GTP for 10 min. Reactions were terminated by transcription stop mix (20 mM EDTA, pH 8.0, 200 mM NaCl, 1% SDS, 0.5 g/ml yeast total RNA). Samples were treated with 1 g/ml proteinase K, and the RNA was purified by phenol/chloroform/isoamyl alcohol (25:24:1) extraction and ethanol precipitation. RNA was resuspended in formamide dye solution (90% formamide, 1 mM EDTA, bromphenol blue, and xylene cyanol), heated, separated on 10% denaturing polyacrylamide gels, dried, and exposed to a phosphorimaging screen. Images were recorded using a Typhoon system (GE Healthcare) and analyzed using ImageJ. Percent (%) active complex was calculated by the following formula: % RNA runoff ϭ (full-length RNA ϩ EC RNA), plotted on the y axis versus time (x axis), and the data were then fit to an exponential decay curve for comparison using Excel.
RNA Cross-linking and Footprinting-RNA cross-linking was performed as described previously (28,43), except that 3-O-MeGTP was omitted. Briefly, ECs were formed on DNA tem-plates using ϳ500 fmol of RNAPII in transcription buffer with 0.03 mM bromo-UTP, 0.03 mM ATP, 0.005 mM CTP, and 4 Ci of [␣-32 P]CTP (6000 Ci/mmol). ECs were formed for 20 min, and then Spt4/5 was added with 500 ng of competitor yeast total RNA. Samples were then UV-irradiated for 10 min at 308 nm, and 1 g of RNase A and 10 units of DNase I (Roche Applied Science) were added and the samples incubated at 37°C for 1 h. Samples were resolved on SDS-PAGE, dried, and exposed to a phosphorimaging screen.
For RNase protection, footprinting experiments were conducted on ECs formed on DNA templates immobilized on streptavidin M-280 Dynabeads. ECs were formed in transcription buffer using ϳ100 fmol of RNAPII plus 0.1 mM ATP, 0.1 mM CTP, 0.1 mM for 20 min. Nucleotides and free protein were removed by magnetic collection and three washes in wash buffer (20 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, 100 mM KCl, 1 mM DTT, 0.02% Nonidet P-40, 100 ng/l BSA). Afterward, the beads were resuspended in reaction buffer (20 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, 100 mM KCl, 5 mM MgCl 2 , 1 mM DTT, 0.01 mM ZnCl 2 , 100 ng/l BSA, 10% glycerol), and [␣-32 P]GTP (6000 Ci/mmol) was added and incubated for 5 min to end label the RNA, and then cold GTP was added to 100 M and incubated for an additional 5 min. The complexes were then collected and washed three times with wash buffer and resuspended in reaction buffer. Spt4/5 was then titrated into the binding buffer, and RNase I (New England Biolabs) was added to 1 unit/l and incubated for 3 min. The reaction was terminated by the addition of transcription stop mixture, and then phenol/chloroform/isoamyl alcohol (25: 24:1) was extracted and ethanol-precipitated. Samples were resuspended in formamide dye and run on 15% denaturing polyacrylamide gels.
DNA Gel Shift and ExoIII Footprinting-Transcription templates for EMSA and ExoIII nuclease footprinting were generating by annealing complementary gel-purified oligos. The top strand was end-labeled with [ 32 P]ATP using polynucleotide kinase. EC formation was performed as described above, except no radiolabeled nucleotides were added, and 10 nM RNAPII for ExoIII footprinting the scale of the reaction was increased to 100 nM RNAPII. ECs (ϮSpt4/5) were loaded on a 4.5% native PAGE in 0.5ϫ TBE and electrophoresed at room temperature for 2 h. For ExoIII footprinting, ExoIII was added to a final concentration of 10 units/l and allowed to digest for varying amounts of time. Samples were quenched with 20 mM Tris-Cl, pH 7.5, 200 mM NaCl, 1% SDS, and 100 ng/l single-stranded DNA. Samples were then treated with proteinase K; phenol/ chloroform/isoamyl (25:24:1) was extracted, ethanol-precipitated, resuspended, and run on a 10% denaturing polyacrylamide gel. Quantification of the ExoIII footprinting was performed by taking the sum total of the bands comprising the RNAPII footprint at nucleotides ϩ18, ϩ17, ϩ16, and ϩ15. The signal in the free DNA digestion samples was considered background and was subtracted out. The sum of these four bands was then calculated, and each individual band was divided by the total (ϩ18/͚ϩ18,ϩ17,ϩ16,ϩ15), and this generated a fraction of the total population.
Immobilization of RNAPII and KMnO 4 Footprinting-Protein A-Sepharose magnetic beads (GE Healthcare) were blocked with 20 mM Na-HEPES, pH 7.8, 150 mM NaCl, 10% glycerol, 250 ng/l BSA and then bound to 8WG16 IgG for 1 h at room temperature. Beads were then washed three times with 10 bed volumes of bead wash buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, 250 mM KCl, and 100 ng/l BSA) and then three times with IgG Wash buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, 100 mM NaCl). RNAPII was then immobilized through the CTD of Rpb1 on protein A magnetic beads in transcription buffer for 1 h at 4°C, washed three times with IgG wash buffer, and finally resuspended in transcription buffer. End-labeled DNA was added to form ECs for 20 min in the presence of 100 M CTP, ATP, and UTP. Beads were washed two times with 20 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, 500 mM KCl, 5 mM MgCl 2 , 0.001 mM ZnCl 2 , 10% glycerol, and 100 ng/l BSA and then two times with the same buffer except that the KCl was reduced to 100 mM. The immobilized ECs were resuspended in transcription reaction buffer supplemented with 2 mM CaCl 2 . Competitor salmon sperm DNA was added to a concentration of 100 ng/l. For RNAPII walking experiments, complexes were eluted using a GST-CTD recombinant protein. Spt4/5 was either added or not, and either 100 M CTP, GTP, or 100 M CTP ATP was added back. 3-Fold molar excess of TFIIS was added back. Complexes were then treated with 5 mM KMnO 4 for 2 min at room temperature and quenched with 20 mM EDTA, 250 mM ␤-mercaptoethanol, 300 ng/l salmon sperm DNA, and 10% piperidine. Samples were then heated to 90°C for 10 min and extracted once with water-saturated n-butanol, precipitated with ethanol, resuspended in 90% formamide buffer, and run on 10% denaturing polyacrylamide gels.
DNase I Footprinting-Elongation complexes were formed on immobilized RNAPII as described above. After washing, elongation complexes were eluted from the magnetic beads using 1 g of recombinant GST-CTD in DNase I reaction buffer (20 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, 100 mM KCl, 5 mM MgCl 2 , 1 mM DTT, 0.01 mM ZnCl 2 , 100 ng/l BSA, 1 mM CaCl 2 , 10% glycerol). Spt4/5 or buffer was added for 5 min, and then 200 ng of salmon sperm DNA was added, and samples were treated with 0.0006 units of DNase I for 1 min at room temperature. Samples were then quenched with 10 mM EDTA and immediately loaded on 0.5ϫ TBE, 4.5% native PAGE. After separation, the gel was exposed to x-ray film, and the bands corresponding to free DNA, ECs, and EC-Spt4/5 complexes were excised, and the DNA was recovered. The DNA was then purified and separated on 10% denaturing PAGE. Quantification of the DNase I footprint was performed using ImageQuant software (GE Healthcare). A trace of each individual lane was taken and adjusted for the total counts in each lane using Excel. Then the traces were generated in Excel and overlaid.
Generation of Photo-probes and 5-Iodo-CTP Photo-crosslinking-Photoreactive nucleotide was incorporated at unique positions by hybridizing an oligo to a long template strand immediately upstream of CA pairs. 10 M 5-iodo-dCTP (Sigma) and 5 Ci of [␣-32 P]dATP (6000 Ci/mmol) were added along with Klenow exoϪ (New England Biolabs) and incubated for 10 min at 37°C. Afterward, all dNTPs were added to a final concentration of 100 M, and the reaction was allowed to extend for 30 min. Double-stranded modified probes were gel-purified on 10% native PAGE. ECs were formed as described above (EC42), and then Spt4/5 was added followed by 200 ng of carrier salmon sperm DNA. Samples were then irra-diated using a 308 nM UV light source for 10 min. After irradiation, the samples were digested with DNase I (10 units) and RNase A (2.5 g) at 37°C for 60 min. SDS-loading buffer was then added, and samples were separated on SDS-polyacrylamide gels, dried, and exposed to phosphorimaging screens.

Results
Characterization of Elongation Complexes Formed from Endinitiated Templates-We use a minimal system for assembling ECs from highly purified components (28,(43)(44)(45)(46). RNAPII elongation was initiated from a 3Ј single strand extension on a duplex template to assemble an EC with a defined transcript produced from a G-less cassette (Fig. 1A). ECs were formed with RNA transcripts between 35 and 70 nucleotides in length, where indicated. These lengths of RNA are sufficient to bind Spt4/5 (see below) (28,29). To produce ECs with different length transcripts, the DNA sequence in the template between the initiation site and the first G was shortened. The sequences immediately upstream of the arrest site and the single stranddouble strand junction were always identical. Previous studies have shown that initiating transcription from some 3Ј-extended templates produced aberrant ECs with extended RNA-DNA hybrids caused by the hybridization of the transcript to the template strand and a displacement of the non-template strand (NTS) from DNA (47)(48)(49). However, it was later found that the extent to which this occurs is dependent on a number of factors, including the source of RNAPII, the sequences of the 3Ј tail, and the region encompassing the single strand-double strand junction on the template (47). Previously, it has been shown that templates using the same 3Ј tail and duplex region as that described here produced transcripts that are resistant to RNase H (cuts RNA-DNA hybrids) and sensitive to RNase A, suggesting extended DNA-RNA hybrids are not produced (44). Nonetheless, because one of the goals of this study was to characterize interaction between Spt4/5 and the nucleic acid scaffold, we further characterized ECs built from this template to validate that a proper nucleic acid scaffold was forming.
We first tested whether the ECs produced here had a properly formed transcription bubble. Potassium permanganate (KMnO 4 ) was used to interrogate the structure and location of the transcription bubble in RNAP (50,51). The thymidine (T) bases in single-stranded DNA are prone to oxidation by KMnO 4 , whereas those located in double-stranded nucleic acids were resistant. If the NTS was being displaced and the transcription bubble failed to close, thymidines in the NTS behind RNAPII would be highly reactive to permanganate. This was not observed. ECs formed by this method resulted in strong permanganate reactivity immediately upstream of the G-tract (ϩ1) at TϪ4, TϪ9, and TϪ10, which are expected to be in the transcription bubble when RNAPII arrests at the first G (Fig.  1B, compare lanes 2 and 3). Weaker activity is also observed at Tϩ5 and Tϩ7, which lie just on the downstream edge of the expected location of the transcription bubble. The weaker reactivity just ahead of the bubble of RNAPII ECs may be caused by bending of the template and enhanced base flipping in this region. Importantly, thymidines in the NTS immediately behind RNAPII are resistant to KnMO 4 indicating bubble closure. Weak RNAPII-dependent reactivity of TϪ27, TϪ35, and TϪ36 was observed. However, these Ts are flanked by a C-tract found in the template. RNAPII stalls or arrests at polynucleotide tracts (52), and this reactivity may be caused by a fraction of RNAPII becoming arrested over this region due to backtracking. To test this hypothesis, the elongation factor TFIIS was added to the reaction. TFIIS would rescue the arrested complexes over the C-tract and lead to a loss of reactivity at these T bases. This was indeed the case; adding TFIIS eliminated the permanganate reactivity at these thymidines (Fig. 1B,  compare lanes 3 and 5). Finally, we demonstrated the KMnO 4 reactivity was resistant to heparin, suggesting that this was not due to a nonspecific interaction between RNAPII and the DNA (Fig. 1B, lanes 3 versus 4). Thus, KMnO 4 reactivity indicates that a transcription bubble is produced and that the NTS is re-annealing with the template strand behind RNAPII.
Previous EC complex mapping revealed that RNAP protects 16 -19 nucleotides of RNA from digestion by single-stranded RNases (53,54). The structure and location of the emerging transcript in the ECs prepared by this method were examined. RNAPII ECs were formed on immobilized DNA templates by transcribing up to the G-tract using "cold" nucleotides lacking GTP; the complexes were washed to remove nucleotides, and then [␣-32 P]GTP was added to produce a 3Ј end-labeled transcript. RNase I digested the transcript down to 17-19 nucleo-tides, a length expected if the RNA was threaded through the RNA exit channel (Fig. 1C). If it emerged aberrantly, such as through the main channel, the size of the protected transcript should be different. Additionally, the sensitivity of the transcript to single-stranded specific RNase indicates that extended RNA-DNA hybrids were not formed on the vast majority of the templates. All of the data described here, and elsewhere (28,(43)(44)(45)(46), indicate that this template produces ECs with the expected nucleic acid scaffold. Spt4/5 Reduces or Prevents RNAPII Arrest-After validating the structure of the ECs, we tested how Spt4/5 bound to ECs and affected the activity of RNAPII. Until now, it has been shown that human Spt4/5 (DSIF) stimulates elongation and mediates 5,6-dichloro-1-␤-D-ribofuranosylbenzimidazole sensitivity of RNAPII in extracts (9,24,55,56), but how Spt4/5 affects RNAPII activity is still unclear. We produced recombinant yeast Spt4/5 complex in Escherichia coli using a polycistronic co-expression system (39). Spt4/5 complexes containing a full-length Spt5 and another lacking the C-terminal region (⌬CTR) were isolated to high purity ( Fig. 2A). Removing the disordered CTR increased expression of the complex and allowed for its separation from Rpb2 in gels in subsequent experiments (see below). Because the CTR is not required for viability in yeast or binding to RNAPII in vitro (

Spt4/5 Interaction with DNA Prevents Arrest of RNAPII
suspected it might be dispensable for the elongation promoting activities of the complex, but this was not known. So the biochemical activities of these two forms were compared. We tested the ability of intact Spt4/5 and the CTR-less derivative to bind to ECs. Although it was known that the CTR-less version of Spt5 interacts with RNAPI and RNAPII (38), it was not known whether the CTR played a role in the binding of Spt4/5 to ECs. ECs (EC42) were assembled onto an end-labeled DNA template; Spt4/5 and Spt4/5(⌬CTR) were titrated into the binding assay, and the complexes were resolved on native gels. The results shown in Fig. 2B indicate that Spt4/5 complexes containing intact and CTR-less Spt5 bound to ECs to the same extent, indicating that the CTR region of Spt5 is not required for Spt4/5 to bind RNAPII ECs in vitro.
The bacterial homolog of Spt5, NusG, has been shown to reduce long lifetime pauses of RNAP and promote elongation (6,57). Archaea Spt4/5 has been shown to enhance general processivity through interactions with the coiled-coil domain of RNAP (7). To determine whether yeast Spt4/5 promotes elongation, we established a transcription assay to measure the activity of Spt4/5 that relies on the propensity of RNAPII to become paused or arrested during prolonged periods of nucleotide depletion. In this assay, radiolabeled ECs are formed for 2.5 min in the absence of GTP, allowing RNAPII to transcribe up to the G-tract in the template (pulse). At that point, cold UTP and Spt4/5 or buffer was added; the excess cold UTP prevented the detection of newly formed ECs during the chase. The ECs were then incubated for increasing amounts of time before GTP was added to initiate the chase (Fig. 2C, upper  panel). The fraction of full-length transcript (active RNAPII) was plotted as a function of time. As expected, the longer GTP was withheld from the reaction, the smaller the fraction of ECs converted into active complexes that produced runoff product (Fig. 2, C and D). When intact Spt4/5 (WT) or the CTR-less Spt4/5 (⌬CTR) was added, the amount of arrested complexes detected at the 5-, 7.5-, 10-, and 20-min time points was reduced compared when Spt4/5 was omitted. The percentage of runoff over time was fit to an exponential decay curve, and the slope of these lines was compared. This analysis indicated Spt4/5 reduced arrest by about half, and the CTR-less version showed the same level of activity (Fig. 2D). Complete runoff was not observed, however, even in the presence of Spt4/5. The fraction of ECs refractory to Spt4/5 activity (ϳ30%) likely represents RNAPII that reached the G-tract and arrested during the 2.5-min pulse before Spt4/5 was added, suggesting that Spt4/5 prevented arrest but cannot rescue pre-arrested complexes. In support of this hypothesis, if Spt4/5 was added after 20 min of GTP starvation, it could not rescue the pre-arrested RNAPII complexes. 3 We conclude from these results that Spt4/5 reduces or prevents arrest of RNAPII, and the CTR of Spt5 is not required for its biochemical activities. Because we could generate higher quality complexes from the CTR-less Spt4/5, it was used for the remaining experiments unless noted  An arrow shows Spt4. The asterisk indicates a contaminating protein migrating just above Spt4 found in the preparation of full-length Spt4/5. B, EMSA of Spt4/5 and Spt4/Spt5 (⌬CTR) binding to RNAPII EC prepared on end-labeled DNA templates. The ratio of Spt4/5 to RNAPII was 0.75, 1.5, and 3.0. Free DNA migrated at the bottom of the gel and was cropped out of the image. C, RNAPII arrest assay comparing intact Spt4/5 and Spt4/5(⌬CTR). Saturating amounts of Spt4/5 were used in the assay, which was determined by shifting all of the EC in EMSA. D, RNAPII arrest assays were quantified as described under "Experimental Procedures" and are plotted as a fraction of active RNAPII as a function of time. The data were fit to an exponential decay curve. The data represent the averages and standard deviations of three independent assays.

Spt4/5 Interaction with DNA Prevents Arrest of RNAPII
otherwise. Following this section, the Spt4/5(⌬CTR) version will be referred to as Spt4/5 in the text for simplicity.
Nascent RNA Transcript Is Required for Yeast Spt4/5 to Bind to ECs-Previous studies indicated that the stable association of metazoan DSIF (Spt4/5) with ECs required RNA to emerge from RNAPII (28,29). To test whether this was also the case for yeast Spt4/5, we measured the binding of Spt4/5 to ECs before and after digesting the transcript with RNase I. RNAPII ECs were formed on end-labeled DNA templates and then split into two pools; one pool was treated with RNase I to digest the emerging transcript, and the other was left untreated. Spt4/5 bound to the untreated ECs but not to those treated with RNase I (Fig. 3A). Even the small amount of binding observed in some lanes in this experiment could be attributed to a small fraction of ECs not digested with RNase.
It was estimated that PDB DSIF requires ϳ4 nucleotides of RNA to associate with RNAPII ECs, suggesting that Spt4/5 contacts the transcript near the RNA exit channel (28). We con-ducted RNase I protection assay on ECs containing 3Ј endlabeled transcripts in the presence and absence of Spt4/5 (Fig.  3B). As described above, RNAPII protected ϳ17-19 nucleotides of the transcript from digestion (Fig. 3B); however, adding Spt4/5 to the assay extended the protection by ϳ2-4 nucleotides (Fig. 3B). This result suggests that, like its Drosophila counterpart, yeast Spt4/5 interacts with RNA as it emerges from RNAPII.
UV cross-linking was performed to determine whether the RNase I protection is caused by direct contact between Spt5 and RNA. ECs were prepared in the presence of radiolabeled CTP and a photoreactive UTP analog, bromo-UTP, to prepare body-labeled transcripts. Complexes were then UV-irradiated and digested with nucleases, and the transfer of labeled RNA to proteins was detected by SDS-PAGE followed by autoradiography. The strongest cross-linking occurred between Rpb1 and RNA, with lower levels detected for Rpb2 (Fig. 3C). This is in agreement with other studies (28,43,58). Adding Spt4/5 resulted in the appearance of an additional radiolabeled band migrating at the expected position of Spt5 (Fig. 3C).
C-terminal KOW Domains of Spt5 Are Required for Spt4/5 Binding to RNAPII-Prokaryotic NusG or Spt4/5 contains a minimal NGN-KOW1 region, and this is sufficient for it to associate with RNAP (7, 20). A previous study using glutathione S-transferase-Spt5 fusion proteins (GST-Spt5) determined that deleting several of the KOW domains resulted in a loss of Spt5 binding to RNAPI and RNAPII (38). Furthermore, in vivo crosslinking studies suggest that the region around KOW domains 4 and 5 cross-link to RNAPII (19). When these cross-link sites were modeled onto existing structures of RNAPII elongation complexes, KOW domains 4 and 5 fit between the Rpb4/7 subunits of RNAPII and the base of the Rpb1 clamp domain (19). Importantly, this model would position Spt5 to protect and physically interact with the emerging transcript. We next wanted to determine how removal of these eukaryotic specific domains would affect the association of Spt4/5 with ECs. Mutants lacking the eukaryotic specific regions of the C terminus of Spt5(⌬419 -1063) and another that removed linkers 3 and 4 and KOW domains 4 and 5 (⌬666 -901) (Fig. 4A) were produced. A gel showing the purified complexes is displayed as Fig. 4B. The ⌬KOW4 and 5 mutant can only be expressed if the CTR region was included, 3 so this construct contained the CTR. Because the effect of deleting these regions on the interaction between Spt4/5 and ECs is unknown, this was examined by EMSA. In these experiments, a range of Spt4/5 concentrations was used so that a K d value for the association of Spt4/5 with RNAPII ECs can be estimated. Spt4/5 bound to RNAPII ECs with high affinity (K d 8.9 Ϯ 2.5 nm). However, deleting most of the C terminus of the Spt4/5(⌬419 -1063) abolished the association of Spt4/5 with RNAPII ECs, and deleting KOW4 and 5 (⌬666 -901) reduced the binding of the complex more than 10-fold (Fig. 4, C and D). When the RNA crosslinking was conducted on these binding mutants, no obvious bands arising from Spt5 were observed (Fig. 4E). These results confirm that the eukaryotic specific regions of Spt5 are required for Spt4/5 to bind to ECs. Additionally, to further confirm that the labeled protein detected in the RNA cross-linking experiments was indeed Spt5, we produced an Spt4/5 complex con-  1-6). Spt4/5 ⌬CTR was titrated in and complexes were resolved on native polyacrylamide gels. B, RNase I footprint of the emerging transcript. Spt4/5 (⌬CTR) was titrated in prior to digestion. The experiment was conducted as described in the legend of Fig. 1C. C, ECs were prepared with body-labeled transcripts using [ 32 P]CTP and bromo-UTP. After exposure to UV, where indicated, samples were digested with DNase I and RNase A and separated on SDS-PAGE. Labeled proteins were visualized by exposing dried gels to a phosphorimager screen. Two different amounts (1-and 3-fold molar excess) of Spt4/5 were added. The locations of the bands corresponding to Rpb1, Rpb2, and Spt5(⌬CTR) are indicated on the right. taining Spt5 lacking the N terminus (283-932). Cross-linking assays using this mutant resulted in a faster migrating band at the size expected of the Spt5 mutant lacking the N terminus, confirming that the labeled protein is Spt5 (Fig. 4E).
Probing the Nucleic Acid Scaffold in Spt4/5-containing ECs-Next, we analyzed interactions between Spt4/5 and DNA in the EC. Current structural models generated from x-ray crystallographic data of archaeal Spt4/5 fused to the clamp domain of RNAP suggest that eukaryotic Spt4/5 may interact with upstream DNA exiting RNAPII. Additionally, two other structures, one of RNAPII including both strands of DNA (18) and another of the isolated KOW1-Linker1 region of Spt5(372-508, K1L1) (32), also suggest that Spt4/5 binds to upstream DNA. In addition, structural modeling of Spt4/5 in ECs suggests that Spt5 could contact the non-template strand of DNA. Although this function has not been documented for Spt5, it was recently reported that Bacillus subtilis NusG interacts with the nontemplate strand of DNA to promote sequence-specific pausing (59). Additionally, the recruitment of RfaH requires exposure of the operon polarity suppressor element within the non-tem-plate strand of DNA (60). Although it has been widely speculated that Spt4/5 binds DNA in the ECs, direct evidence for this is lacking.
To identify contacts between Spt4/5 and DNA, DNase I footprinting of RNAPII ECs was conducted in the presence and absence of Spt4/5. Because only a fraction of the DNA templates will form ECs, ECs were formed on RNAPII immobilized on protein-A magnetic beads coated with 8WG16 antibody that binds the CTD of Rpb1. This allowed enrichment for RNA-PII-engaged templates from the more abundant free templates. Complexes were then eluted from the beads with the recombinant glutathione S-transferase C-terminal domain (GST-CTD), treated with DNase I, and then resolved on preparative native gels to separate free DNA, ECs, and Spt4/5-containing ECs (Fig. 5A, left). The DNA contained in each band was purified and run on a denaturing gel (Fig. 5A, right). Consistent with published DNase I footprints of RNAPII, elongation complexes showed a region of protection of ϳ35-40 bases (Fig. 5A, lanes 3  versus 4) (51, 61). Importantly, Spt4/5 extended the footprint upstream of RNAPII, and protection was extended to bases Values represent the averages and standard deviations of three independent experiments (E). RNA cross-linking assay. The assay was conducted as described in Fig. 3C. A sample of RNAPII alone was untreated with UV (lane 1) (ϪUV) and all others were exposed to UV (lanes 2-10). Two amounts of each of the Spt4/5 complexes were titrated in. "ϩ" indicates the amount of Spt4/5 required to shift ECs in EMSA assays and "ϩϩ" is twice that amount (3-and 6-fold molar excess relative to RNAPII). Lane 1, ϪUV; lane 2, ϩUV; lanes 3 and 4, Spt4/5(⌬CTR); lanes 5 and 6, Spt4/5(⌬666 -901); lanes 7 and 8, Spt4/5(284 -931); and lanes 9 and 10, Spt4/5(⌬419 -1063). The asterisk (Spt5*) marks a breakdown product in the Spt4/5 preparation. The dots mark the migration of the mutants in the gel.

Spt4/5 Interaction with DNA Prevents Arrest of RNAPII
Ϫ19 to Ϫ21 or 22 (Fig. 5A, lanes 4 versus 5) when visualized on the gel. The footprinting result was presented graphically by scanning the gel, normalizing for the signal in the entire lane, and plotting it as a distance from the parental band (Fig. 5B). A close-up of the gel near the upstream side of polymerase reveals protection at Ϫ20 in the presence of Spt4/5 and weaker protection at Ϫ19 and upstream (Fig. 5B, compare the red versus black trace). The footprint is not strong but was observed in three experiments and on two different templates. 3 This suggests Spt4/5 contacts DNA behind RNAPII, and additional evidence is presented below to support this claim.
Next, we examined the effect of Spt4/5 on the size and structure of the transcription bubble by permanganate footprinting. Previous models of eukaryotic and archaeal Spt4/5 suggest it may play a role in maintaining bubble integrity by aiding in the closing of the bubble as DNA exits RNA polymerase (8,10,18,32). The experiment was conducted under two conditions in the presence and absence of Spt4/5. In both cases, ECs were formed on immobilized RNAPII, washed of nucleotides, and then eluted from the protein A beads (Fig. 6A). At this point, ECs were separated into two pools. One pool was given ATP and CTP, which left RNAPII arrested at the G-tract, and allowed for the examination of the effect of Spt4/5 on the "static" EC ( Fig. 6B, lanes 3 and 4). The other pool was given GTP and CTP, which allowed RNAPII to "walk" across the four G-nucleotides (Fig. 6B, lanes 5 and 6). This condition may reveal changes in the bubble brought about by Spt4/5 during/ after movement of RNAPII.
As stated above, TϪ4, TϪ9, and TϪ10 lie within the transcription bubble when RNAPII arrests at the first G in the template. As observed in other experiments using RNAPII, TϪ4, TϪ9, and TϪ10 were the primary reactive species when only CTP and ATP were added, and RNAPII remained arrested at the first G (compare Figs. 1B and 6B, lanes 3 and 4). Adding Spt4/5 did not alter the footprinting pattern, suggesting that Spt4/5 did not change the transcription bubble under these conditions (Fig. 6B, compare lanes 3 and 4). Walking RNAPII forward by four bases across the G-tract by adding GTP would place TϪ9 and TϪ10 in the upstream edge of the duplex of the transcription bubble, reducing their reactivity to permanganate. Furthermore, Tϩ5 would now be placed within the single-stranded region of the bubble and become more reactive.  MAY 6, 2016 • VOLUME 291 • NUMBER 19

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY 9861
These changes were observed (Fig. 6B, compare lanes 3 versus  5), although it appears that not all of the RNAPII walked to the new location, because the increase in the reactivity of Tϩ5 and reduction in reactivity of the Ϫ9 and Ϫ10 positions were not quantitative. Importantly, there were no differences in the reactivity of these locations in the presence of Spt4/5 (Fig. 6B, compare lanes 5 and 6). Although we cannot rule out that Spt4/5 may kinetically affect the opening or closing of the transcription bubble, we conclude that under equilibrium conditions Spt4/5 does not alter the size of the transcription bubble.
The results above suggest that Spt4/5 protects bases upstream of RNAPII. It is possible that Spt4/5 contacts DNA downstream (ahead of polymerase). Furthermore, nothing is known about how Spt4/5 affects the tracking of RNAPII along DNA. NusG causes the lateral movement of RNAP downstream by one nucleotide, which may represent the post-translocated state of RNAP (11). Either of these two changes brought about by Spt4/5 can be revealed by ExoIII footprinting of the leading edge of RNAPII. RNAPII ECs were formed on endlabeled DNA templates and incubated with or without Spt4/5, followed by digestion with ExoIII. Probing ECs with ExoIII generated an RNAPII-dependent footprint, as shown by the protection of the DNA compared with digestion of naked DNA (Fig. 6C, lanes 2 and 3 versus lanes 4 and 5). Adding Spt4/5 extended the footprint compared with RNAPII alone by approximately one or two nucleotides downstream (Fig. 6C,  compare lanes 4 and 5 versus lanes 6 and 7). The shift in the distribution of ExoIII stops was quantified, and the data from multiple experiments are presented in Fig. 6B. This footprinting result argues against extensive protection of downstream DNA by Spt4/5, but it is strikingly similar to the lateral movement of RNAP caused by NusG (11). A conservative interpretation of this result is that Spt4/5 extends the leading edge of RNAPII downstream, which may be caused by a structural change in RNAPII.   6 and 7). Positions of the bands are labeled to the right of the gel and represent the distance downstream from Gϩ1. D, quantification of the ExoIII data from four independent experiments presented as the averages and S.E. The numbers on the left indicate the size of the band in nucleotides and correspond to those indicated in C.

Spt4/5 Interaction with DNA Prevents Arrest of RNAPII
Spt5 Contacts the Non-template Strand in the Transcription Bubble and DNA Upstream of RNAPII-To provide further evidence that Spt4/5 contacts DNA within the nucleic acid scaffold, we turned to site-specific cross-linking. Using the findings from our DNase I footprinting experiments (Fig. 5) and the model of the Spt5(NGN)-Spt4 in the RNAPII EC (10), we selected locations to incorporate the photoreactive nucleotide analog 5-iodo-2Ј-dCTP adjacent to radiolabeled adenine nucleotide in the NTS (Fig. 7A). The photoreactive probes were placed into the NTS because structural models predicted that the NTS would be in close proximity to Spt4/5 and because incorporating the probes in the template strand could impede transcription of RNAPII up to the G-tract. Photoreactive nucleotides were incorporated at positions Ϫ21/23, Ϫ19, Ϫ12, Ϫ5, and ϩ14 (ϩ1 is the first G in the G-tract) (Fig. 7B). Ϫ21/23 and Ϫ19 are located upstream of RNAPII (14,51); Ϫ12 is located near the expected site of strand re-annealing; Ϫ5 is located in the transcription bubble, and ϩ14 is located downstream of RNAPII and is a control because we would expect lower levels of cross-linking of RNAPII at this location. The strategy to incorporate the radiolabeled and photoactive nucleotides produced templates with photoreactive nucleotides at both the Ϫ21 and Ϫ23 positions because of the DNA sequence. Rpb2 cross-linked to the DNA with the highest efficiency, with lower levels of Rpb1 cross-linking detected (Fig. 7C). The strong cross-linking of the NTS to Rpb2 is consistent with the recently published crystal structure of RNAPII with an intact transcription bubble, which revealed that the NTS passes along the surface of Rpb2 (18). A diffuse band above Rpb1 was also observed.
It is unclear what this band is, but it may represent undigested DNA-protein products or UV-induced aggregates. As expected, low levels of Rpb1 and Rpb2 cross-linking were observed at the ϩ14 site, which should be positioned just ahead of RNAPII. Spt5 cross-linked at Ϫ21/23, Ϫ19, Ϫ12, and Ϫ5. No cross-linking of Spt5 was detected at position ϩ14 (Fig. 7C), suggesting that the cross-linking of Spt5 to DNA requires it to be properly positioned in the RNAPII EC. Weaker bands migrating faster than Spt5 were also observed in the lanes containing Spt4/5. These bands may be truncated forms of Spt5 contained in the preparations or breakdown of Spt5 during cross-linking. Interestingly, even though Spt4 is in close proximity to DNA in the model (Fig. 7B), we failed to conclusively identify a labeled band of the size of Spt4 in high percentage gels. 3 However, this negative result does not definitely rule out the possibility that Spt4 interacts with another region of the nucleic acid scaffold. Furthermore, as a control, we performed cross-linking at the Ϫ12 position using a mutant form of Spt4/ 5(⌬666 -901) that binds poorly to RNAPII ECs (see Fig. 4C), and we found that no cross-linking was observed (Fig. 7D). These data are the first evidence that eukaryotic Spt5 physically interacts with DNA upstream of RNAPII and contacts the nontemplate strand of the transcription bubble.  KOW1 Linker of Spt5 Is Dispensable for the Biochemical Activities of Spt4/5-A high resolution x-ray crystal structure of the KOW1-linker (K1L1) region of Spt5 was solved, and this fragment of the protein bound single-and double-stranded nucleic acids (32). However, the importance of this region, which is believed to be the counterpart of the KOW domain in prokaryotic Spt5 homologs, for the biochemical activities of the complex is not known. We examined the association of an Spt4/5 complex containing Spt5 lacking the K1L1 region (⌬K1L1) with ECs. Fig. 8A shows that the mutant complex bound to ECs, and a titration of different amounts of the complex suggests that it has a slightly reduced affinity compared with the intact complex (about 2-fold). Thus, the K1L1 region plays a minor role in the binding of Spt4/5 to RNAPII elongation complexes in vitro.

Spt4/5 Interaction with DNA Prevents Arrest of RNAPII
The anti-arrest activity of the K1L1 mutant was examined using the EC arrest assay described above. The results show that the Spt5 K1L1 mutant can prevent arrest but may not be as effective as the wild type complex (Fig. 8B). The slight reduction in activity, which is reproducible, may be related to the small decrease in binding observed in the EMSA experiments. Nonetheless, although the K1L1 region may be required for optimal interaction with RNAPII ECs, it is not essential for the biochemical activities of Spt4/5 examined here.
One potential function of the K1L1 region in Spt5 is binding to DNA in the transcription scaffold. DNA cross-linking assays were conducted using the Spt4/5(⌬K1L1) mutant under saturated binding conditions. We examined cross-linking within the transcription bubble (Ϫ5) and upstream DNA (Ϫ21/Ϫ23). It was proposed that the K1L1 of Spt5, together with Spt4, "cradles" upstream DNA (32). However, the results show that the K1L1 mutant cross-linked at the Ϫ5 and Ϫ21/Ϫ23 positions (Fig. 8C). This does not rule out the possibility that K1L1 binds to DNA, but deleting it does not affect Spt5 cross-linking in the regions tested here.
Highly Conserved Basic Surface on the NGN Domain of Spt5 Contacts the Non-template Strand and Is Required for Spt4/5 to Prevent RNAPII Arrest-The recent publication of the structure of an RNAPII EC with the complete transcription bubble provided an opportunity to more precisely position Spt4/5 within the RNAPII EC (18). Based on this model, we identified two regions within the NGN domain of Spt5 that contained stretches of positively charged amino acids that could form a DNA-binding surface. One of these surfaces (302-308) is highly conserved in all Spt5 homologs and is predicted to face the transcription bubble (Fig. 9A, green residues), whereas the other (316 -321) is not universally conserved and projects away from the NTS (Fig. 9A, orange). Spt4/5 complexes containing Spt5 with alanine substitutions in the basic residues on these surfaces, 302-308A and 316 -321A, were purified and analyzed.
The mutants were subjected to site-specific DNA cross-linking on ECs with 5-iodo-2Ј-dC at the Ϫ5 and Ϫ12 positions in the NTS. Consistent with our modeling results, mutating the highly conserved patch of basic residues (302-308) prevented the cross-linking of Spt5 to the NTS, whereas the mutant with substitutions in the non-conserved patch facing away from the transcription bubble (316 -321) cross-linked to both positions (Fig. 9B). These results indicate that the NTS binds to this basic surface of the NGN domain of Spt5 and provides stronger evidence that eukaryotic Spt5 binds to DNA in the EC. The 302-308A Spt5 mutant was able to form a complex with Spt4, 3 suggesting the mutations did not cause gross structural changes to the NGN domain. However, a trivial explanation for why the Spt4/5(302-308A) derivative failed to cross-link to the NTS is that the mutations prevented the binding of the mutant complex to ECs. However, this was not the case as the mutant complex bound as well as the wild type version (Fig. 9C).
We next wanted to understand the significance of the binding of the NTS to the NGN domain. Based on work on NGN homologs from prokaryotes (60), interaction between the NGN FIGURE 8. Conserved KOW1-linker region is dispensable for the biochemical activities of Spt4/5. A, EMSA comparing the binding of Spt4/5(⌬CTR) and Spt4/5⌬K1L1 to ECs. Assays were conducted as described in the legend of Fig. 2B. The Spt4/5⌬K1L1 mutants also have the CTR removed, but it is labeled more simply in the figure. B, RNAPII arrest assay comparing the activity of RNAPII alone or RNAPII plus Spt4/5(⌬CTR) or Spt4/5⌬K1L1. Data are plotted as the fraction of active ECs as a function of time. The data were fit to an exponential decay curve. Error bars represent the standard deviation of three independent experiments. C, DNA photo-cross-linking of Spt4/5 to the Ϫ5 (lanes 1-4) and Ϫ21/Ϫ23 (lanes 5-8) positions.
domain and DNA may be necessary for Spt4/5 to prevent arrest of RNAPII. As described above, Spt4/5 prevented the pausing or arrest of RNAPII over the G-tract during prolonged GTP omission (Fig. 9D). However, the Spt4/5(302-308A) mutant lost this activity. Because this mutant associated with RNAPII ECs (Fig. 9C), we conclude that contact between this conserved surface of Spt5 and the NTS is required for Spt4/5 to prevent arrest of RNAPII. The significance of this interaction will be addressed under the "Discussion." Phenotypic Effects of 302-308A and K1L1 Mutations-SPT5 is an essential gene (27). The ability of the K1L1 deletion and the NGN 302-308A mutant to support viability was examined. To do so, we utilized the "anchor-away" approach (62) to conditionally deplete Spt5 from the nucleus. A strain whose only copy of SPT5 contains an in-frame fusion with the FRB fragment (SPT5-FRB) and expressing an FKBP12 fusion of the ribosomal protein Rpl13 was constructed. Rapamycin induced dimerization of Spt5-FRB, and FKBP12-Rpl13 conditionally sequesters Spt5 in the cytoplasm, and cells transformed with the empty vector (pRS313) were not viable on rapamycin plates (Fig. 10A). However, a plasmid containing a wild type copy SPT5 fully complemented the growth defect (Fig. 10A). The spt5 K1L1⌬ mutant did not support viability (Fig. 10A). Interestingly, expression of the K1L1 mutant caused slightly slowed growth of the strain even in the absence of rapamycin. This can be explained by competition between the mutant and the Spt5-FRB protein that supported the functions. Thus, even though this mutant displayed only mild biochemical defects, it could not complement the loss of Spt5 from the nucleus. This suggests it has additional functions in the cell. In contrast, the spt5(302-308A) mutant was viable but displayed temperaturesensitive growth. The viability of this mutant suggests that the essential functions of Spt5 are not impacted by mutation of these residues (see under "Discussion").
The plasmid copy of the SPT5 derivatives contained an epitope tag (HA) at the C terminus to allow for the measurement of protein levels by Western blotting. When Spt4/5 is recruited to genes, the CTR of Spt5 is phosphorylated by Kin28 and Bur1, thereby changing its migration in gels (36). Analyzing the phosphorylation state of the Spt5 derivatives can provide information on its incorporation into elongation complexes in vivo. Spt5 migrated as two species, a lower un-phosphorylated form and a slower migrating phosphorylated form (Fig. 10B). Previous studies confirmed that the upper species is phosphorylated Spt5 (36,37,63). As a control, extracts from cells expressing a version of Spt5 with all the phosphorylation sites in the CTR (CTR Ser 3 Ala) mutated were included to help identify the un-phosphorylated form of Spt5 in gels (37). A few  MAY 6, 2016 • VOLUME 291 • NUMBER 19

Spt4/5 Interaction with DNA Prevents Arrest of RNAPII
interesting things were noted. First, when rapamycin was added the proportion of the phosphorylated species increased. This makes sense because as the Spt5-FRB leaves the nucleus, it no longer competes with the plasmid copy of Spt5. This increases the proportion of Spt5-HA recruited to genes where it can become phosphorylated. Second, the mutants were expressed to similar levels as the wild type cells. Finally, both mutants were phosphorylated. This suggests that these mutants are incorporated into ECs in vivo. This is consistent with the data showing that both mutants bound to RNAPII ECs in vitro (Figs. 8 and 9). The phosphorylation of the CTR of Spt5 recruits Paf1c (RNA polymerase-associated factor 1), which in turn leads to the cotranscriptional ubiquitylation of histone H2B by Rad6 (35,(63)(64)(65). H2B ubiquitylation is a mark of active transcription elongation and is used as an indicator of ongoing transcription elongation on a global scale. Ubiquitylated H2B appears as a slower migrating species in Western blots that is dependent on the RAD6 gene. The Spt5 anchor-away strain containing plasmid copies of wild type or Spt5 mutants were grown to log phase and then rapamycin was added to half of the culture. Cell extracts were prepared after 90 min and analyzed by Western blotting using an antibody to H2B (Fig. 10C). Treating cells transformed with an empty vector (pRS313) with rapamycin caused a dramatic reduction of H2B ubiquitylation (Fig. 10C,  lanes 1 versus 2), but introducing a plasmid containing a wild type copy of SPT5 fully restored H2B ubiquitylation levels. However, the 302-308A and the ⌬K1L1 mutants only partially complemented the loss of H2B ubiquitylation (Fig. 10C, lanes 5  versus 6 and lanes 7 versus 8). The reduced H2B ubiquitylation suggests that transcription elongation is impaired in these SPT5 mutants and that the basic patch in the NGN of Spt5(302-308) contributes to elongation in vivo. As controls, a strain expressing an Spt5 derivative where all of the serines in the CTR were changed to alanines (spt5 Ser 3 Ala) was analyzed. As expected, this mutant caused reduced H2B ubiquitylation (35,63).

Discussion
Changes occur to RNAPII as it transitions from the pre-initiation complex into a productive elongation complex. One FIGURE 10. Analysis of the growth properties of Spt5 mutants. A, anchor-away yeast strains (SPT5-FRB) containing either pRS313, pRS313-SPT5-HA 3 (WT), pRS313-spt5(302-308A)-HA 3 , or pRS313-spt5(⌬K1L1)-HA 3 were spotted onto synthetic media-His Ϯ rapamycin (1 g/ml) and incubated at either 30 or 37°C for 3 days. B, Western blot analysis of yeast extracts from cells grown in the absence or presence of 1 g/ml rapamycin. Cells were grown to an A 600 of 0.7, and then rapamycin was added for 1.5 h. Yeast bearing a plasmid containing an SPT5 mutant with the phosphorylated serine residues changed to alanines (spt5-CTR Ser 3 Ala) was used to discriminate the phosphorylated from the un-phosphorylated forms of Spt5 in the blot. C, analysis of H2B ubiquitylation. Western blot of cell extracts using an antibody to yeast H2B. A light exposure panel (below) serves as a control for total histone levels. Extracts from a rad6⌬ mutant was run on the gel as a control to identify the ubiquitylated form of H2B.
such change is its association with elongation factors, including the primordial elongation factor Spt4/5 (66). The recruitment of DSIF (metazoan Spt4/5 complex) requires a minimal length of mRNA emerging from RNAPII, and this event is thought to be among the earliest changes in the elongation complex during the transition from initiation to elongation into the body of genes. Although it has been shown that Spt5 can bind across the jaw and the clamp of archaeal RNAP, which may close the clamp to encircle DNA to enhance processivity (67), little was known about how the binding of Spt4/5 to the nucleic acid scaffold in ECs affects elongation. The interaction between Spt5 and upstream DNA was predicted from structural modeling studies based on x-ray crystal structures and high resolution cryo-EM of Spt5 homologs (8,10); however, prior to our study no direct evidence for the binding of Spt5 to the DNA has been presented nor has the significance of these interactions been tested. Here, we used a defined, highly purified system to demonstrate that a surface on the NGN domain of Spt5 contacts the non-template strand in the transcription bubble and that this interaction is important for Spt4/5 to promote elongation by reducing arrest or pausing of RNAPII.
Importance of Spt5-DNA Interactions-It has been shown that RfaH, a NusG homolog, and NusG from eubacteria interact with the NTS of DNA in a sequence-specific manner, where it controls pausing of RNAP (59,60). Whether or not the interaction between NGN domains of Spt5 and the non-template strand is important for function was unknown, especially because sequence-specific pausing is not known to occur in eukaryotes. We used site-specific photoreactive DNA crosslinking to show for the first time that a highly conserved basic patch on the NGN domain of Spt5 contacts the NTS in the transcription bubble. Contact between the NGN domain of eukaryotic Spt5 and the NTS strongly suggests that this function is conserved throughout evolution, and we propose that it may be a fundamental requirement for Spt5 homologs to regulate RNAP elongation. Recently, Spt4/5 from the archaea Methanocaldococcus jannaschii was shown to bind to doublestranded DNA. They described a region of the NGN domain as containing an alkaline surface that is responsible for binding to free DNA that overlaps with residues 302-308 of yeast Spt5 (68). Additionally, mutations of basic amino acids in this region affect the activity of RfaH (69). Thus, the DNA binding properties of the NGN domain and that of its paralog appear to be conserved.
It has been speculated that Spt4/5 plays a role in stabilizing the upstream duplex, assisting in bubble closure (8,10,18,32). Until recently, DNA upstream of the RNAPII elongation complex was a virtual unknown, which lacked structural definition. This led many to view it as a semi-stable region of duplexed DNA, which could be stabilized by Spt4/5. Recent crystallization of the RNAPII complete transcription bubble seems to indicate all of the structural requirements to promote strand re-annealing is located within Rpb1 and Rpb2. In particular, the wedge/hairpin loop within Rpb2 was shown to contact the upstream duplex and likely works with "the arch," composed of the rudder and FL1 residues, to close the bubble. Mutations in the tip of the loop reduce transcription elongation rates in vitro, and the mutants display a number of phenotypes consistent with impaired elongation in cells (18). Clearly, RNAPII can close the bubble on its own without Spt4/5, and our permanganate footprinting experiment failed to detect changes in the size and/or closure of the transcription bubble in the presence of Spt4/5 (Fig. 6B). However, as stated under the "Results," such experiments can only provide a static picture of the bubble. Whether or not Spt4/5 stabilizes upstream of DNA during the dynamic act of transcription remains to be tested.
So what is the role of the interaction between the basic patch on the NGN domain of Spt5 and the non-template strand? We propose a modification of the bubble closure models proposed by others, called the bubble chaperone mechanism. In RNAPII, the NTS passes over the arch (rudder and FL1) and rejoins the template strand behind it (18). The basic patch on the NGN provides an additional surface to guide the NTS around the arch, in essence "taming" the NTS to ensure it proceeds along the most productive path to rejoin the NTS (Fig. 11). Additionally, the binding of the NGN domain to the NTS could also prevent the association of the NTS with surfaces on the wall or arch that stabilize a paused/arrested state, thus reducing the pausing/arrest of RNAPII. This could explain why mutating the residues on the basic patch (302-308) of the NGN abolished the anti-arrest properties of Spt4/5. This model also suggests a role for Spt4/5 beyond encircling the DNA and closing the clamp and suggests that Spt4/5 plays a more extensive role in promoting elongation.
Modeling, footprinting, and cross-linking data suggest Spt4/5 contacts DNA as it exits RNAPII, so binding to the NTS strand in the transcription bubble is one part of the equation. Contact between Spt5 and upstream DNA may stabilize the association of RNAPII with DNA. A recent crystal structure of the KOW1-Linker1 (K1L1) region of yeast Spt5 identified a nucleic acid interaction surface, called the positively charged patch (32). The authors proposed, based on genetic evidence that showed mutations in the positively charged patch of K1L1 are synthetically lethal when Spt4 was absent, that the K1L1 wraps up along the DNA on the opposite side of the helix where Spt4 is positioned to act like pinchers in a claw to stabilize the  FIGURE 11. Bubble chaperone model of Spt4/5 action on ECs. A model illustrating the bubble chaperone mechanism. Model was generated by overlaying crystal structures of the archaeal clamp fused to archaeal Spt5 (data not shown, PDB code 3QQC), RNAPII with template and non-template strand (PDB code 5C4X) (18), and yeast Spt4/5 (PDB code 2EXU) (74). Spt4 and Spt5 are shown in electrostatic space-filling mode. Gray indicates all subunits of RNAPII except for Rpb2. Rpb2 was omitted from this structure except the Arch domain, which is shown in black. The template and non-template strand are shown as orange, and the RNA is in yellow. Hypothetical DNA path in the presence of Spt4/5 was drawn manually in red over the existing structure.
interaction of Spt4/5 in the EC (32). We found that deleting the entire K1L1 region had a modest ϳ2-fold effect on the binding of the mutant Spt4/5 complex to ECs (Fig. 8A), which generally supports a role for this domain in stabilizing the interaction of Spt4/5 with elongation complexes. Surprisingly, this mutant displayed very little reduction in anti-pausing/arrest activity and still interacted with the NTS in the transcription bubble.
Thus, its appears that the K1L1 is dispensable for most known biochemical activities of the Spt4/5 complex. Interestingly, the ⌬K1L1 mutant is expressed and phosphorylated in vivo but is unable to support viability (Fig. 10A). These results suggest that the K1L1 has functions in cells beyond preventing RNAPII arrest. Further characterization of the ⌬K1L1 mutant in vivo would be interesting but is beyond the scope of our study. Compare that with the NGN(302-308A) mutant, which could support viability. The ability of the SPT5(302-308A) mutant to support viability seems at odds with its inability to prevent arrest in vitro. However, most bona fide elongation factors are non-essential in yeast; SPT5 is the exception because it participates in a number of essential functions such as splicing, capping, and ribosomal RNA production (5,34,38,70,71). The elongation promoting activity of Spt4/5 may not be an essential function for cell survival under idealized growth conditions, but it imparts a competitive advantage to the organism or is more important during stress. The latter explanation would be consistent with the temperature-sensitive phenotype of the SPT5(302-308A) mutant and the H2B ubiquitylation defects observed in both Spt4/5 mutants.
Extended Regions of Eukaryotic Spt5 May Coordinate Changes in RNAPII Structure-We provide evidence that contact between the NGN and the NTS is important for the activity of Spt4/5. However, this is not likely the only way Spt4/5 promotes elongation. NusG and archaeal Spt5 completely bridge the two lobes of RNAP, interacting with the clamp coil of Rpb1/␤Ј and the ␤ gate loop of ␤ and RpoB. Mutation of these surfaces compromises the activity of NusG/Spt5 (7, 20). From this study and other data, a model has been proposed that NusG/Spt5 acts to reduce "fluttering" of the two subunits, which in turn controls the movement of the RNAP trigger loop (12,13,17). NusG acts to stabilizes RNAP in a post-translocated state (11). Likewise, the binding of Spt4/5 to the clamp could affect structures such as the trigger loop or increase processivity by binding across the jaws of RNAPII.
In the case of prokaryotes, the NGN domain is sufficient for association with the elongation complex and controlling elongation activity (7, 72). Our data, and that of others (38), suggest that this is not the case in eukaryotes and that additional domains in Spt5 are required for its association with RNAPII. Elegant in vivo site-specific cross-linking studies found that a region of Spt5 containing KOW domains 4 and 5 cross-linked to Rpb4/7, the stalk, of RNAPII (19,58,73). Our biochemical data support the important role that KOW domains 4 and 5, and other regions in the C terminus, play in the binding of Spt4/5 to RNAPII (Fig. 4). It is interesting that KOW domains 4 and 5 contact Rpb4/7, because Spt5 cross-links to RNA near the exit channel (this study), and the binding of the emerging transcript to Rpb7 has been observed (58,73). Interactions between Spt4/5 and ECs may be stabilized through contact with Rpb4/7 and the emerging transcript. Because these regions are physically linked to the NGN domain, this could allow "communication" between the clamp, the stalk of RNAPII, and the emerging transcript.
Spt5 Links Different Features of the EC Complex to the Elongation Process-Our data show that Spt4/5 makes contact with several different structural features of the RNAPII elongation complex required for it to bind to ECs and prevent arrest. It could simply be that Spt4/5 requires additional binding surfaces contributed by the eukaryotic specific regions of Spt5 to stabilize its interaction with elongating RNAPII as it navigates the chromatin barrier or as different co-transcriptional RNA and chromatin-modifying factors are exchanged during elongation. A more interesting idea is that Spt5 serves as a sensor of multiple steps in the transcription process. Spt5 contacts upstream DNA, the transcription bubble, the clamp, the Rpb4/7 module, and the emerging transcript. Spt4/5 may coordinate the translocation of RNAPII with the growth of the emerging transcript, the movement of the Rpb4/7 and clamp, and the tracking of the DNA in the transcription bubble. Conceptually, the ability of the Spt4/5 complex to interact with all of the "moving parts" of the ECs (nucleic acids and RNAPII) provides a mechanical rationale for Spt4/5 to stabilize the RNAPII ground state after each translocation event during elongation. This could prevent arrest by preventing non-productive, uncoordinated movements among the different structures that would cause arrest.
Author Contributions-J. B. C. and J. C. R. designed the studies and wrote the manuscript. J. B. C. performed the experiments and analyzed the data. J. F. provided RNAPII, edited the manuscript, and shared unpublished data.