Coliphage N4 virion RNA polymerase (vRNAP), the most distantly related member of the T7-like family of RNA polymerases, is responsible for transcription of the early genes of the linear double-stranded DNA phage genome. Escherichia coli singlestranded DNA-binding protein (EcoSSB) is required for N4 early transcription in vivo, as well as for in vitro transcription on supercoiled DNA templates containing vRNAP promoters. In contrast to other DNA-dependent RNA polymerases, vRNAP initiates transcription on single-stranded, promoter-containing templates with in vivo specificity; however, the RNA product is not displaced, thus limiting template usage to one round. We show that EcoSSB activates vRNAP transcription at limiting single-stranded template concentrations through template recycling. EcoSSB binds to the template and to the nascent transcript and prevents the formation of a transcriptionally inert RNA:DNA hybrid. Using C-terminally truncated EcoSSB mutant proteins, human mitochondrial SSB (Hsmt SSB), phage P1 SSB, and F episome-encoded SSB, as well as a Hsmt-EcoSSB chimera, we have mapped a determinant of template recycling to the C-terminal amino acids of EcoSSB. T7 RNAP contains an amino-terminal domain responsible for binding the RNA product as it exits from the enzyme. No sequence similarity to this domain exists in vRNAP. Hereby, we propose a unique role for EcoSSB: It functionally substitutes in N4 vRNAP for the N-terminal domain of T7 RNAP responsible for RNA binding.B acteriophage N4 virion RNA polymerase (vRNAP), responsible for transcription of the phage early genes, is injected into the host cell with the phage genome upon infection (1). vRNAP is inactive on linear double-stranded templates but transcribes denatured genomic N4 DNA or promoter-containing single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) with in vivo specificity (2, 3). vRNAP promoters contain a 5-to 7-bp stem, 3-nt loop hairpin, and conserved sequences (3, 4).In vivo, N4 early transcription requires Escherichia coli DNA gyrase and E. coli ssDNA-binding protein (EcoSSB), which provide an ''active'' promoter structure (5). Other SSBs (T7 gp 2.5, T4 gp 32, and N4 SSB) fail to stimulate vRNAP transcription in vitro because they destabilize the promoter hairpin (6). vRNAP transcripts generated from ssDNA templates are retained as RNA⅐DNA hybrids, suggesting that vRNAP cannot displace the RNA product (2). We show that EcoSSB activates vRNAP transcription on ssDNA templates through displacement of the RNA product and, therefore, through template recycling.The 177-aa EcoSSB polypeptide consists of a 115-aa Nterminal domain responsible for DNA binding and an Ϸ50-aa Pro-and Gly-rich sequence followed by a 10-aa acidic tail, highly conserved in eubacterial SSBs (7,8). Human mitochondrial (Hsmt) SSB is similar in sequence and structure to the Nterminal domain of EcoSSB but lacks the conserved C-terminal sequence (9-11). We show that Hsmt SSB did not activate vRNAP transcription although it did not disrupt the promoter hairpin. We determined that the 10 C-terminal ami...