Abstract
Clostridium difficile, a causative agent of
antibiotic-associated diarrhea and its potentially lethal form,
pseudomembranous colitis, produces two large protein toxins that are
responsible for the cellular damage associated with the disease. The
level of toxin production appears to be critical for determining the
severity of the disease, but the mechanism by which toxin synthesis is
regulated is unknown. The product of a gene, txeR, that
lies just upstream of the tox gene cluster was shown to
be needed for tox gene expression in vivo
and to activate promoter-specific transcription of the
tox genes in vitro in conjunction with
RNA polymerases from C. difficile, Bacillus
subtilis, or Escherichia coli. TxeR was shown to
function as an alternative sigma factor for RNA polymerase. Because
homologs of TxeR regulate synthesis of toxins and a bacteriocin in
other Clostridium species, TxeR appears to be a
prototype for a novel mode of regulation of toxin genes.
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
218 articles.
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