136k views
0 votes
How does Actinomycin D inhibit elongation?

User Mohit Bumb
by
7.9k points

1 Answer

3 votes

Final answer:

Actinomycin D inhibits transcription elongation by intercalating between G=C base pairs in DNA, disrupting RNA polymerase movement and halting the transcription process.

Step-by-step explanation:

Actinomycin D inhibits elongation during transcription by intercalating into the DNA double helix. It specifically inserts itself between successive G=C base pairs, which disrupts the movement of RNA polymerase along the DNA template. This binding prevents the RNA polymerase from progressing, thereby jamming and stopping the transcription process. Both DNA-directed RNA synthesis and DNA synthesis can be inhibited by Actinomycin D, but RNA synthesis is more susceptible, especially the synthesis of ribosomal RNA.

User Jens Kloster
by
8.3k points

Related questions

Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.