Affiliation:
1. Department of Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53706
Abstract
ABSTRACT
We have previously shown that the activity of the
Escherichia coli
rRNA promoter
rrnB
P1 in vitro depends on the concentration of the initiating nucleotide, ATP, and can respond to changes in ATP pools in vivo. We have proposed that this nucleoside triphosphate (NTP) sensing might contribute to regulation of rRNA transcription. To test this model, we have measured the ATP requirements for transcription from 11 different
rrnB
P1 core promoter mutants in vitro and compared them with the regulatory responses of the same promoters in vivo. The seven
rrnB
P1 variants that required much lower ATP concentrations than the wild-type promoter for efficient transcription in vitro were defective for response to growth rate changes in vivo (growth rate-dependent regulation). In contrast, the four variants requiring high ATP concentrations in vitro (like the wild-type promoter) were regulated with the growth rate in vivo. We also observed a correlation between NTP sensing in vitro and the response of the promoters in vivo to deletion of the
fis
gene (an example of homeostatic control), although this relationship was not as tight as for growth rate-dependent regulation. We conclude that the kinetic features responsible for the high ATP concentration dependence of the
rrnB
P1 promoter in vitro are responsible, at least in part, for the promoter's regulation in vivo, consistent with the model in which
rrnB
P1 promoter activity can be regulated by changes in NTP pools in vivo (or by hypothetical factors that work at the same kinetic steps that make the promoter sensitive to NTPs).
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
50 articles.
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