Abstract
The genes D1 and D12, predicted to encode the 95- and 31-kDa subunits of the vaccinia virus mRNA capping enzyme, were coexpressed from the same plasmid in Escherichia coli. Induction with low concentrations of isopropyl .beta.-D-thiogalactoside was necessary to obtain soluble enzyme. The active heterodimer was purified by column chromatography and was shown to have both RNA guanylyltransferase and mRNA (guanine-N7-)-methyltransferase activities. Formation of the m7G(5'')pppG cap structure was verified by enzyme digestion and thin-layer chromatography. Each subunit was also expressed individually in E. coli. Without the large subunit, the small one was very unstable in some bacterial strains and could only be detected by pulse labeling with radioactive amino acids. The individually expressed large subunit contained the guanylyltransferase domain, but the activity from E. coli was <2% of that obtained with both subunits. Two other products of the D1 open reading frame were formed: a 55-kDa subfragment with the GMP binding site and a 38-kDa C-terminal fragment that started at amino acid 498. Expression of this heterodimeric enzyme in E. coli may facilitate the analysis of its functional domains and provide a useful reagent for the specific 5''labeling of uncapped or capped RNA and for enhancing RNA translatability in eukaryotic systems.