Middle transcription of bacteriophage Mu requiresEscherichia coli RNA polymerase and a Mu-encoded protein, Mor. Consistent with these requirements, the middle promoter, P m , has a ؊10 hexamer but lacks a recognizable ؊35 hexamer. Interactions between Mor and RNA polymerase were studied using in vitro transcription, DNase I footprinting, and the yeast interaction trap system. We observed reduced promoter activity in vitro using reconstituted RNA polymerases with C-terminal deletions in ␣ or 70 . As predicted if ␣ were binding to P m , we detected a polymerase-dependent footprint in the ؊60 region. Reconstituted RNA polymerases containing Ala substitutions in the ␣ C-terminal domain were used to assay Mor-dependent transcription from P m in vitro. The D258A substitution and ␣ deletion gave large reductions in activation, whereas the L262A, R265A, and N268A substitutions caused smaller reductions. The interaction trap assay revealed weak interactions between Mor and both ␣ and 70 ; consistent with a key role of ␣-D258, the D258A substitution abolished interaction, whereas the R265A substitution did not. We propose that: (i) ␣-D258 is a Mor "contact site"; and (ii) residues Leu-262, Arg-265, and Asn-268 indirectly affect Mor-polymerase interaction by stabilizing the ternary complex via ␣-DNA contact.Bacteriophage Mu is a temperate phage of Escherichia coli K-12 and several other enteric bacteria (1). Mu uses the host RNA polymerase (RNAP) 1 throughout its lytic development (2) to transcribe three sets of genes: early, middle, and late (3). Middle operon transcription requires phage DNA replication and the early gene product Mor (3, 4) and results in expression of C, which in turn activates transcription of late genes encoding phage morphogenesis, cell lysis, and DNA modification functions (5, 6). Transcription from the middle promoter, P m , requires activation by Mor and is carried out by the E. coli RNAP holoenzyme containing 70 (4, 7). The detailed mechanism by which this activation occurs remains unknown; for example, it might involve protein-protein interactions between Mor and RNA polymerase, conformational changes in the promoter DNA, or a combination of both.Previous in vivo and in vitro footprinting analysis of P m revealed single-stranded bases resulting from distortion in the Ϫ33 region, close to the predicted interface between Mor and RNAP (8). The distortion was dependent on the presence of both Mor and RNAP in vitro and involved strand separation confined to positions Ϫ35 through Ϫ31, as inferred from sensitivity to KMnO 4 modification and Mung bean or S1 nuclease cleavage following modification with dimethyl sulfate. This unwinding was enhanced or abolished in Up or Down spacerregion mutants, respectively, indicating that it may play a role in the activation of transcription.The middle promoter possesses characteristic features of a promoter under positive control (9) (Fig. 1); it has a recognizable Ϫ10 hexamer but lacks similarity to the canonical Ϫ35 hexamer (at most, a 2-base pair match to consen...