Staff Profile
Professor Nikolay Zenkin
Professor of Molecular Biology
- Telephone: +44 (0) 191 208 3227
- Address: Centre for Bacterial Cell Biology
Biosciences Institute
Baddiley-Clark Building
Newcastle University
Richardson Road
Newcastle upon Tyne
NE2 4AX
United Kingdom
Current lab: 4 post-docs, 3 PhD students
CV
Full Name and Title: Nikolay Zenkin, PhD (Russian/British)
Date of birth: 26/07/1979
Place of birth: Dubna (Moscow Region), Russia
Title of current appointment: Professor of Molecular Biology; Centre for Bacterial Cell Biology, Biosciences Institute, Newcastle University
Education and Qualification:
1996-2001 B.A., M.S. (Biochemistry). Moscow State University (Biological Faculty, Department of Molecular Biology)
2001-2004 Ph.D. (Molecular Biology). Institute of Molecular Genetics, Moscow.
Appointments held:
1999-2000 Research Trainee. Engelhardt Institute of Molecular Biology, Moscow
2000-2001 Research Trainee. Institute of Molecular Genetics, Moscow
2001-2004 Ph.D. Student (Molecular Biology). Institute of Molecular Genetics, Moscow
2002-2004 Research Associate. Waksman Institute, Rutgers University, NJ
2004-2007 Post-Doctoral Research Associate. Waksman Institute, Rutgers University, NJ
2007-2009 Lecturer. Institute for Cell and Molecular Biosciences of Newcastle University.
2009-2013 Senior Lecturer. Centre for Bacterial Cell Biology, Institute for Cell and Molecular Biosciences, Newcastle University.
2013-present Professor of Molecular Biology; Centre for Bacterial Cell Biology, Biosciences Institute, Newcastle University
Honours and Awards:
2019 - 2024 – Wellcome Trust Molecular Basis of Cell Function Expert Review Group
2020 – Wellcome Trust Investigator Award
2017 – Organiser of 29th UK RNA polymerase workshop in Newcastle University
2014 – Philip Leverhulme Prize
2014 – Newcastle University Academic Distinction Award
2014 – Organiser of 26th UK RNA polymerase workshop in Newcastle University
2014 – Fleming Prize Lecture Award
2014 – Wellcome Trust Senior Investigator Award
2006 – Manchester University Research Fellowship (declined by applicant on account of Lecturer position)
2006 – Alexander von Humboldt Foundation Research Fellowship (declined by applicant on account of Lecturer position)
2019 – External PhD examiner York University
2016 – External PhD examiner CNRS, Montpellier University
External referee for research and review papers, BBSRC, MRC, Welcome Trust, Leverhulme, Singapore NMRC research grants.
Funding (sole PI unless otherwise stated):
2020 – Wellcome Trust Investigator Award: “Coupling of transcription with other cellular processes” (PI; £2.1M)
2019 – MICA MRC Grant “Novel mode of RNA polymerase inhibition by a new natural rifamycin, which is active against rifampicin-resistant RNA polymerases and bacteria” (PI; £800K)
2019 – EPSRC Programme Grant “The Physics of Antimicrobial Resistance” (Co-I; £3.5M)
2017 – Royal Society collaborative grant (PI; £12K)
2016 – EPSRC Programme Grant “Portabolomics” (Co-I; £7.5M)
2014 – Philip Leverhulme Prize (PI; £100K)
2014 – Wellcome Trust Senior Investigator Award: “Transcription: from catalysis to cellular regulation” (PI; £1.2M)
2013 – BBSRC Research Grant: “Mechanisms of transcription termination” (PI; £ 441K)
2012 – Russian Ministry of Education and Science Research Grant ”Bioengineering of mitochondria: directed modification of protein biosynthesis in mitochondria” (PI; ~£60K)
2012 – BBSRC Research Grant: “Regulation of elongation by RNA polymerase and ribosome via intrinsic signals and transcription-translation coupling” (PI; £692K)
2010 – System Biology in Microorganisms (SysMo) Research Grant (Funded by BBSRC): “Role of transcriptional fidelity and processivity on the noise of transcription, and its consequences for phenotypic bistability in Streptococcus pneumoniae” (PI; £360K)
2008 – European Research Council Starting Grant 2007; "Mechanisms of Transcription Proofreading" (PI; EUR 1.15M)
2008 – BBSRC Research Grant; "Transcription elongation processivity: resolution of backtracked complexes " (PI; £461K)
2008 – BBSRC Research Grant; “Characterisation of novel functions of the active centre of RNA polymerase” (PI; £600K)
2007 – Royal Society Research Grant; “Investigation of cleavage reactions by RNA polymerase” (PI; £15K)
Competitive studentships:
2017 – EPSRC PhD studentship
2017 – BBSRC PhD studentship
2016 – MRC CASE PhD studentship
2013 – BBSRC PhD studentship
2009 – MRC PhD studentship
2008 – BBSRC PhD studentship
Training record:
PIs:
-Dr Yulia Yuzenkova, Royal Society University Research Fellow, Senior Lecturer, Newcastle University
-Dr Katherine James, Head of Bioinformatics, National History Museum London; Principal Fellow, Northumbria University.
Post-Docs:
-14, all (apart from two who went on to work in industry, and one for government) are continuing in academia in my or other labs (Birmingham, Edinburgh, Manchester, Copenhagen, Umea Universities).
Post-graduate Students:
-7 PhD and 1 MPhil students to completion
-currently supervise 3 and directly co-supervise 3 PhD students.
Invited speaker
Invited lectures in Umea, Uppsala, Groningen, York, Bristol, Moscow State Universities, and Russian Academy of Sciences
Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology research conference “Mechanism & Regulation of Prokaryotic Transcription”, 2017. Saxtons River, VT, USA
Zing conference “Regulating with RNA in Bacteria and Archaea” 2015 Cancun, Mexico
Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology research conference “Mechanism & Regulation of Prokaryotic Transcription”, 2015. Saxtons River, VT, USA
Zing conference “Nucleic Acids” 2014 Cancun, Mexico
Fleming Award Lecture, Society for General Microbiology, 2014. Liverpool, UK
Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology research conference “Mechanism & Regulation of Prokaryotic Transcription”, 2013. Saxtons River, VT, USA
Invited Lecture. 2012. Bristol University, UK
Society for General Microbiology Spring Conference, 2012. Dublin, Ireland
Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology research conference, “Mechanism and Regulation of Prokaryotic transcription”, 2011. Saxtons River, VT, USA
69th Harden Conference “RNAP - Structure, function and evolution of RNA polymerases”. 2010. Hinxton, Cambridge, UK
Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology research conference “Nucleic Acid Enzymes”, 2010. Snowmass Village, Colorado, USA
Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology research conference, “Mechanism and Regulation of Prokaryotic transcription”, 2009. Saxtons River, VT, USA
American Society for Microbiology 108th General Meeting, 2008
UK RNA polymerase workshop, York University, 2008.
Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology research conference, “Mechanism and Regulation of Prokaryotic transcription”, 2007. Saxtons River, VT, USA (n/a)
UK RNA polymerase workshop, Imperial College of London, 2007.
Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology research conference, “Mechanism and Regulation of Prokaryotic transcription”, 2005. Saxtons River, VT, USA
Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology research conference “Mechanism and Regulation of Prokaryotic transcription”, 2003. Saxtons River, VT, USA
Book chapters:
Mosaei H*., Zenkin N*. (2020) Inhibition of RNA Polymerase by Rifampicin and Rifamycin-Like Molecules. EcoSal Plus. 9(1). doi: 10.1128/ecosalplus.ESP-0017-2019.
Castro-Roa D and Zenkin N. Relations Between Replication and Transcription. In: Kušić-Tišma, J, ed. Fundamental Aspects of DNA Replication. Rijeka, Croatia: InTech Open, 2011, pp.289-306
Nechaev S., Zenkin N. and Severinov K. Regulation of RNA polymerase through its active center. In: Buc, H., and Strick, T. ed. RNA polymerases as molecular motors. Cambridge, UK: RSC Pub., 2009, pp 236-259
Patents:
“Compounds for treating infections caused by rifampicin-resistant bacteria”
GB Initial filing-GB201812078, PCT Filing-WO2020/021252 (https://patents.google.com/patent/WO2020021252A1/en)
Molecular basis of gene expression
Transcription, copying genetic information into RNA, is the first step of gene expression. In all living organisms transcription is accomplished by conserved multi-subunit RNA polymerases, one of the most ancient enzymes on the planet. Understanding functions of RNA polymerase are essential for understanding evolution of Life of the planet. Importantly, malfunctions of RNA polymerases are linked to various human diseases including cancer and Alzheimer. Also transcription is the potent target for antimicrobials. Many mechanistic details of the functioning of RNA polymerases are not clear. Furthermore RNA polymerases are imbedded in intricate relations with other cellular machineries, such as translation in prokaryotes or replication and repair in all organisms. Regulation of these interactions is pivotal for coordination of cellular processes, correct gene expression and ultimately for survival of organisms. The mechanisms underlining these interactions and their regulation are also poorly understood.
We are investigating transcription. All possible aspects: from mechanisms of reactions and inhibition by antibiotics to regulation and interactions with other cellular machineries, such as translation, splicing and replication. We use classical biochemistry and molecular biology, structural biology, some unique experimental systems as well as novel techniques. In vitro we investigate bacterial and eukaryotic RNA polymerases I, II and III. In vivo we are focusing on bacterial transcription.
The main goal of our study is to understand how RNA polymerase evolved to the enzyme we know today, and how it functions and is regulated in the modern cells. Another important aspect of our work is to look for the ways of manipulation of RNA polymerases (such as specific inhibition) in order to control pathogenicity.
Bacterial toxin-antitoxin systems
Bacteria invented several mechanisms to fight against their enemies –bacteriophages and antibiotics. One of such systems, toxin-antitoxin (TA) systems, involves a large number of small proteins, called toxins, which reversibly target essential processes in the bacterial cell to stop these processes and bring the cell to dormancy. Such dormant cells become temporarily resistant to antibiotics (phenomenon called persistence) because antibiotic targets are temporarily non-functional in them, as well as become “not interesting” to bacteriophages, because they cannot propagate in dormant cells. There are also some other biological important phenomena, such as programmed cell death and addiction to plasmids, linked to TA systems. TA systems involve large number of activities and targets, many of which are not yet known or characterised.
We are interested in mechanistic and catalytic details of functioning of TAs and the outcomes of their action for their targets.
Interests:
Specific: cellular machineries working with nucleic acids.
General: molecular evolution, physics of high gravities and velocities.
Selected publications:
Harbottle J, Zenkin N*. (2020) Ureidothiophene inhibits interaction of bacterial RNA polymerase with -10 promotor element. Nucleic Acids Res. 48(14):7914-7923. doi: 10.1093/nar/gkaa591.
Stevenson-Jones F., Woodgate J., Castro-Roa D, Zenkin N*. (2020) Ribosome reactivates transcription by physically pushing RNA polymerase out of transcription arrest. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. pii: 201919985. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1919985117
Mosaei H., Molodtsov, V., Kepplinger B., Harbottle J., Moon C., Jeeves R., Ceccaroni L., Shin, Y., Morton-Laing S., Marrs M., Wills C., Clegg W., Yuzenkova Y., Perry J., Bacon J., Errington J., Allenby N., Hall M., Murakami K., Zenkin N*.(2018) Mode of action of Kanglemycin A, an ansamycin natural product that Is active against rifampicin-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis. MOLECULAR CELL 72:263
Forrest, D., James, K., Yuzenkova, Y., Zenkin, N*. (2017) Single-peptide DNA-dependent RNA polymerase homologous to multi-subunit RNA polymerase. NATURE COMMUNICATIONS 8:15774.
James, K., Gamba, P., Cockell, S.J., Zenkin, N*. (2017) Misincorporation by RNA polymerase is a major source of transcription pausing in vivo. NUCLEIC ACIDS RES 45:1105
van Nues, R. W., Castro-Roa, D., Yuzenkova, Y., Zenkin, N*.(2016) Ribonucleoprotein particles of bacterial small non-coding RNA IsrA (IS61 or McaS) and its interaction with RNA polymerase core may link transcription to mRNA fate. NUCLEIC ACIDS RES 44:2577
Castro-Roa, D., Garcia-Pino, A., De Gieter, S., van Nuland, N. A. J., Loris, R., and Zenkin, N* (2013) The Fic protein Doc uses an inverted substrate to phosphorylate and inactivate EF-Tu. NATURE CHEM BIOL 9:811-7
Germain, E., Daniel Castro-Roa, D., Zenkin, N.*. and Gerdes, K. (2013) Molecular Mechanism of Bacterial Persistence by HipA. MOLECULAR CELL 52:248-54
Yuzenkova, Y., Roghanian, M., Bochkareva, A., Zenkin, N.* (2013) Tagetitoxin inhibits transcription by stabilizing pre-translocated state of the elongation complex. NUCLEIC ACIDS RES, 41:9257-65
Nielsen, S.U., Yuzenkova, Y., and Zenkin, N*. (2013). Mechanism of RNA polymerase III transcription termination. SCIENCE 340:1577-1580
Zenkin, N*. (2012). Hypothesis: emergence of translation as a result of RNA helicase evolution. J MOL EVOL 74:249-256
Bochkareva, A., Yuzenkova, Y., Tadigotla, V. and Zenkin, N*. (2012). Factor-independent transcription pausing caused by recognition of the RNA-DNA hybrid sequence. EMBO J 31:630-639
Yuzenkova, Y., Tadigotla, V.R., Severinov, K., and Zenkin, N*. (2011). A new basal promoter element recognized by RNA polymerase core enzyme. EMBO J 30:3766-3775
Yuzenkova Y., Zenkin N*. (2010) Central role of the RNA polymerase trigger loop in intrinsic RNA hydrolysis PROC NATL ACAD SCI U S A 107:10878-83
Zenkin, N*., Yuzenkova, Y. and Severinov, K. (2006) Transcript-assisted transcriptional proofreading. SCIENCE, 313:518-20.
Zenkin, N*., Naryshkina, T., Kuznedelov, K. and Severinov, K. (2006) The mechanism of DNA primer synthesis by RNA polymerase. NATURE, 439:617
Temiakov, D., Zenkin, N. (equal contr.), Vassylyeva, M. N., Perederina, A., Tahirov, T. H., Kashkina, E., Savkina, M., Zorov, S., Nikiforov, V., Igarashi, N., Matsugaki, N., Wakatsuki, S., Severinov, K. and Vassylyev, D. G. (2005). Structural basis of transcription inhibition by antibiotic streptolydigin. MOLECULAR CELL 19:655-66.
Zenkin, N. and Severinov, K. (2004). The role of RNA polymerase sigma subunit in promoter-independent initiation of transcription. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 101, 4396-400.
PhDs:
I currently supervise three and co-supervise two PhD students
Earlier I have supervised 9 PhD students and 1 MPhil student to completion.
Teaching:
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Articles
- Woodgate J, Zenkin N. Transcription–translation coupling: Recent advances and future perspectives. Molecular Microbiology 2023, 120(4), 539-546.
- Mosaei H, Zenkin N. Two distinct pathways of RNA polymerase backtracking determine the requirement for the Trigger Loop during RNA hydrolysis. Nucleic Acids Research 2021, 49(15), 8777-8784.
- Harbottle J, Mosaei H, Allenby N, Zenkin N. Kanglemycin a can overcome rifamycin resistance caused by adp-ribosylation by arr protein. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 2021, 65(12), e00864-21.
- Ilyin AA, Stolyarenko AD, Zenkin N, Klenov MS. Complex genetic interactions between piwi and hp1a in the repression of transposable elements and tissue‐specific genes in the ovarian germline. International Journal of Molecular Sciences 2021, 22, 24.
- Harbottle J, Zenkin N. Ureidothiophene inhibits interaction of bacterial RNA polymerase with -10 promotor element. Nucleic Acids Research 2020, 48(14), 7914-7923.
- Stevenson-Jones F, Woodgate J, Castro-Roa D, Zenkin N. Ribosome reactivates transcription by physically pushing RNA polymerase out of transcription arrest. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2020, 117(15), 8462-8467.
- Panchal VV, Griffiths C, Mosaei H, Bilyk B, Sutton JAF, Carnell OT, Hornby DP, Green J, Hobbs JK, Kelley WL, Zenkin N, Foster SJ. Evolving MRSA: High-level β-lactam resistance in Staphylococcus aureus is associated with RNA Polymerase alterations and fine tuning of gene expression. PLoS Pathogens 2020, 16(7), e1008672.
- Talavera A, Hendrix J, Versees W, Jurenas D, Van Nerom K, Vandenberk N, Singh RK, Konijnenberg A, De Gieter S, Castro-Roa D, Barth A, De Greve H, Sobott F, Hofkens J, Zenkin N, Loris R, Garcia-Pino A. Phosphorylation decelerates conformational dynamics in bacterial translation elongation factors. Science Advances 2018, 4(3), eaap9714.
- Mosaei H, Molodtsov V, Kepplinger B, Harbottle J, Moon C, Jeeves R, Ceccaroni L, Shin Y, Morton-Laing S, Marrs ECL, Wills C, Clegg W, Yuzenkova J, Perry JD, Bacon J, Errington J, Allenby NEE, Hall MJ, Murakami KS, Zenkin N. Mode of Action of Kanglemycin A, an Ansamycin Natural Product that Is Active against Rifampicin Resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Molecular Cell 2018, 72(2), 263-274.
- Tyler A, Mosaei H, Morton S, Waddell PG, Wills C, McFarlane W, Gray J, Goodfellow M, Errington J, Allenby N, Zenkin N, Hall MJ. Structural Reassignment and Absolute Stereochemistry of Madurastatin C1 (MBJ-0034) and the Related Aziridine Siderophores: Madurastatins A1, B1 and MBJ-0035. Journal of Natural Products 2017, 80(5), 1558-1562.
- Forrest D, James K, Yuzenkova Y, Zenkin N. Single-peptide DNA-dependent RNA polymerase homologous to multi-subunit RNA polymerase. Nature Communications 2017, 8, 15774.
- James K, Gamba P, Cockell SJ, Zenkin N. Misincorporation by RNA polymerase is a major source of transcription pausing in vivo. Nucleic Acids Research 2017, 45(3), 1105-1113.
- James K, Cockell SJ, Zenkin N. Deep sequencing approaches for the analysis of prokaryotic transcriptional boundaries and dynamics. Methods 2017, 120, 76-84.
- van Nues RW, Castro-Roa D, Yuzenkova Y, Zenkin N. Ribonucleoprotein particles of bacterial small non-coding RNA IsrA (IS61 or McaS) and its interaction with RNA polymerase core may link transcription to mRNA fate. Nucleic Acids Research 2016, 44(6), 2577-2592.
- Zenkin N, Yuzenkova Y. New Insights into the Functions of Transcription Factors that Bind the RNA Polymerase Secondary Channel. Biomolecules 2015, 25(3), 1195-1209.
- Castro-Roa D, Zenkin N. Methodology for the analysis of transcription and translation in transcription-coupled-to-translation systems in vitro. Methods 2015, 86, 51-59.
- Zenkin N, Severinov K, Yuzenkova Y. Bacteriophage Xp10 anti-termination factor p7 induces forward translocation by host RNA polymerase. Nucleic Acids Research 2015, 43(13), 6299-6308.
- Roghanian M, Zenkin N, Yuzenkova Y. Bacterial global regulators DksA/ppGpp increase fidelity of transcription. Nucleic Acids Research 2015, 43(3), 1529-1536.
- Zenkin N. RNA secondary structure-dependent termination of transcription. Cell Cycle 2014, 13, 3-4.
- Sustarsic M, Plochowietz A, Aigrain L, Yuzenkova Y, Zenkin N, Kapanidis A. Optimized delivery of fluorescently labeled proteins in live bacteria using electroporation. Histochemistry and Cell Biology 2014, 142(1), 113-124.
- Zenkin N. Multiple personalities of the RNA polymerase active centre. Microbiology 2014, 160, 1316-1320.
- Yuzenkova Y, Gamba P, Herber M, Attaiech L, Shafeeq S, Kuipers OP, Klumpp S, Zenkin N, Veening JW. Control of transcription elongation by GreA determines rate of gene expression in Streptococcus pneumoniae. Nucleic Acids Research 2014, 42(17), 10987-10999.
- Zorov S, Yuzenkova Y, Nikiforov V, Severinov K, Zenkin N. Antibiotic streptolydigin requires non-catalytic Mg2+ for binding to RNA polymerase. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 2014, 58(3), 1420-1424.
- Zenkin N. Ancient RNA stems that terminate transcription. RNA Biology 2014, 11(4), 295-297.
- Nielsen S, Zenkin N. Transcript assisted phosphodiester bond hydrolysis by eukaryotic RNA polymerase II. Transcription 2013, 4(5), 209-212.
- Bochkareva A, Zenkin N. The sigma70 region 1.2 regulates promoter escape by unwinding DNA downstream of the transcription start site. Nucleic Acids Research 2013, 41(8), 4565-4572.
- Castro-Roa D, Garcia-Pino A, De Geiter S, van Nuland NAJ, Loris R, Zenkin N. The Fic protein Doc uses an inverted substrate to phosphorylate and inactivate EF-Tu. Nature Chemical Biology 2013, 9(12), 811-817.
- Castro-Roa D, Garcia-Pino A, De Gieter S, van Nuland NAJ, Loris R, Zenkin N. The Fic protein Doc uses an inverted substrate to phosphorylate and inactivate EF-Tu. Nature Chemical Biology 2013, 9(12), 811-817.
- Yuzenkova Y, Roghanian M, Bochkareva A, Zenkin N. Tagetitoxin inhibits transcription by stabilizing pre-translocated state of the elongation complex. Nucleic Acids Research 2013, 41(20), 9257-9265.
- Kuzmenko AV, Levitskii SA, Vinogradova EN, Atkinson GC, Hauryliuk V, Zenkin N, Kamenski PA. Protein biosynthesis in mitochondria. Biochemistry (Moscow) 2013, 78(8), 855-866.
- Germain E, Castro-Roa D, Zenkin N, Gerdes K. Molecular Mechanism of Bacterial Persistence by HipA. Molecular Cell 2013, 52(2), 248-254.
- Kuzmenko A, Atkinson GC, Levitskii S, Zenkin N, Tenson T, Hauryliuk V, Kamenski P. Mitochondrial translation initiation machinery: Conservation and diversification. Biochimie 2013, 100, 132-140.
- Nielsen S, Yuzenkova Y, Zenkin N. Mechanism of Eukaryotic RNA Polymerase III Transcription Termination. Science 2013, 340(6140), 1577-1580.
- Yuzenkova Y, Roghanian M, Zenkin N. Multiple active centers of multi-subunit RNA polymerases. Transcription 2012, 3, 115-118.
- Castro-Roa D, Zenkin N. In vitro experimental system for analysis of transcription-translation coupling. Nucleic Acids Research 2012, 40(6), e45.
- Zenkin N. Hypothesis: Emergence of Translation as a Result of RNA Helicase Evolution. Journal of Molecular Evolution 2012, 74(5-6), 249-256.
- Bochkareva A, Yuzenkova Y, Tadigotla VR, Zenkin N. Factor-independent transcription pausing caused by recognition of the RNA-DNA hybrid sequence. EMBO Journal 2012, 31(3), 630-639.
- Roghanian M, Yuzenkova Y, Zenkin N. Controlled interplay between trigger loop and Gre factor in the RNA polymerase active centre. Nucleic Acids Research 2011, 39(10), 4352-4359.
- Yuzenkova Y, Tadigotla VR, Severinov K, Zenkin N. A new basal promoter element recognized by RNA polymerase core enzyme. EMBO Journal 2011, 30(18), 3766-3775.
- Yuzenkova Y, Bochkareva A, Tadigotla VR, Roghanian M, Zorov S, Severinov K, Zenkin N. Stepwise mechanism for transcription fidelity. BMC Biology 2010, 8(1), 54.
- Yuzenkova Y, Zenkin N. Central role of the RNA polymerase trigger loop in intrinsic RNA hydrolysis. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2010, 107(24), 10878-10883.
- Yuzenkova Y, Zenkin N, Severinov K. Mapping of RNA Polymerase Residues that Interact with Bacteriophage Xp10 Transcription Antitermination Factor p7. Journal of Molecular Biology 2008, 375(1), 29-35.
- Zenkin N, Kulbachinskiy A, Yuzenkova Y, Mustaev A, Bass I, Severinov K, Brodolin K. Region 1.2 of the RNA polymerase sigma subunit controls recognition of the -10 promoter element. EMBO Journal 2007, 26(4), 955-964.
- Zenkin N, Yuzenkova Y, Severinov K. Transcript-Assisted Transcriptional Proofreading. Science 2006, 313(5786), 518-520.
- Campbell EA, Pavlova O, Zenkin N, Leon F, Irschik H, Jansen R, Severinov K, Darst SA. Structural, functional, and genetic analysis of sorangicin inhibition of bacterial RNA polymerase. EMBO J 2005, 24, 674-82.
- Temiakov D, Zenkin N, Vassylyeva MN, Perederina A, Tahirov TH, Kashkina E, Savkina M, Zorov S, Nikiforov V, Igarashi N, Matsugaki N, Wakatsuki S, Severinov K, Vassylyev DG. Structural Basis of Transcription Inhibition by Antibiotic Streptolydigin. Molecular Cell 2005, 19(5), 655-666.
- Brodolin K, Zenkin N, Severinov K. Remodeling of the sigma70 subunit non-template DNA strand contacts during the final step of transcription initiation. J Mol Biol 2005, 350, 930-7.
- Zenkin N, Kulbachinskiy A, Bass I, Nikiforov V. Different rifampin sensitivities of Escherichia coli and Mycobacterium tuberculosis RNA polymerases are not explained by the difference in the beta-subunit rifampin regions I and II. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2005, 49, 1587-90.
- Brodolin K, Zenkin N, Mustaev A, Mamaeva D, Heumann H. The sigma 70 subunit of RNA polymerase induces lacUV5 promoter-proximal pausing of transcription. Nat Struct Mol Biol 2004, 11, 551-7.
- Zenkin N, Severinov K. The role of RNA polymerase σ subunit in promoter-independent initiation of transcription. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2004, 101(13), 4396-4400.
- Wigneshweraraj SR, Burrows PC, Nechaev S, Zenkin N, Severinov K, Buck M. Regulated communication between the upstream face of RNA polymerase and the beta subunit jaw domain. EMBO J 2004, 23, 4264-74.
- Adelman K, Yuzenkova J, LaPorta A, Zenkin N, Lee J, Lis JT, Borukhov S, Wang MD, Severinov K. Molecular mechanism of transcription inhibition by peptide antibiotic Microcin J25. Mol Cell 2004, 14, 753-62.
- Budarina ZI, Nikitin DV, Zenkin N, Zakharova M, Semenova E, Shlyapnikov MG, Rodikova EA, Masyukova S, Ogarkov O, Baida GE, Solonin AS, Severinov K. A new Bacillus cereus DNA-binding protein, HlyIIR, negatively regulates expression of Bcereus haemolysin II. Microbiology 2004, 150, 3691-701.
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Book Chapters
- Castro-Roa D, Zenkin N. Methods for the Assembly and Analysis of In Vitro Transcription-Coupled-to-Translation Systems. In: Irina Artsimovitch and Thomas J. Santangelo, ed. Bacterial Transcriptional Control. New York, NY. USA: Springer New York, 2015, pp.81-99.
- Castro-Roa D, Zenkin N. Relations Between Replication and Transcription . In: Kušić-Tišma, J, ed. Fundamental Aspects of DNA Replication. Rijeka, Croatia: InTech Open, 2011, pp.289-306.
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Editorial
- Nielsen S, Zenkin N. Response to Comment on "Mechanism of eukaryotic RNA polymerase III transcription termination". Science 2014, 345(6196), 524-524.
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Letter
- Zenkin N, Naryshkina T, Kuznedelov K, Severinov K. The mechanism of DNA replication primer synthesis by RNA polymerase. Nature 2006, 439(7076), 617-620.
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Patent
- Kepplinger B, Sejzi H, Zenkin N, Hall M, Allenby N, Errington J. Compounds for Treating Infections Caused by Rifampicin-resistant Bacteria. WO2020021252A1, 2018, 30/01/2020.
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Reviews
- Mosaei H, Zenkin N. Inhibition of RNA Polymerase by Rifampicin and Rifamycin-Like Molecules. EcoSal Plus 2020, 9(1).
- Gamba P, Zenkin N. Transcription fidelity and its roles in the cell. Current Opinion in Microbiology 2018, 42, 13-18.
- Gamba P, James K, Zenkin N. A link between transcription fidelity and pausing in vivo. Transcription 2017, 8(2), 99-105.
- Garcia-Pino A, Zenkin N, Loris R. The many faces of Fic: structural and functional aspects of Fic enzymes. Trends in Biochemical Sciences 2014, 39(3), 121-129.
- Zenkin N, Severinov K. RNA polymerase - The third class of primases. Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences 2008, 65(15), 2280-2288.