Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544
Abstract
ABSTRACT
When envelope biogenesis is compromised or damage to envelope components occurs, bacteria trigger signaling cascades, which lead to the production of proteins that combat such extracytoplasmic stresses. In
Escherichia coli
, there are three pathways known to deal with envelope stresses: the Bae, Cpx, and σ
E
responses. Although the effectors of the Bae and Cpx responses are not essential in
E. coli
, the effector of the σ
E
response, the sigma factor RpoE (σ
E
), is essential for viability. However, mutations that suppress the lethality of an
rpoE
-null allele can be easily obtained, and here we describe how we have isolated at least four classes of these suppressors. We present the first description of one such suppressor class, loss-of-function mutations in
ydcQ
, a gene encoding a putative DNA-binding protein. In wild-type
rpoE
+
strains,
ydcQ
mutants have two distinct phenotypes: extracytoplasmic stress responses are significantly downregulated, and the production of outer membrane vesicles is severely reduced. We present a model in which σ
E
is not essential per se but, rather, we propose that
rpoE
mutant cells die, possibly because they overreact to the absence of this σ factor by triggering a cell death signal.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
62 articles.
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