Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61801
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The
B. subtilis pyrG
gene, which encodes CTP synthetase, is located far from the pyrimidine biosynthetic operon on the chromosome and is independently regulated. The
pyrG
promoter and 5′ leader were fused to
lacZ
and integrated into the chromosomes of several
B. subtilis
strains having mutations in genes of pyrimidine biosynthesis and salvage. These mutations allowed the intracellular pools of cytidine and uridine nucleotides to be manipulated by the composition of the growth medium. These experiments indicated that
pyrG
expression is repressed by cytidine nucleotides but is largely independent of uridine nucleotides. The start of
pyrG
transcription was mapped by primer extension to a position 178 nucleotides upstream of the translation initiation codon. A factor-independent termination hairpin lying between the
pyrG
promoter and its coding region is essential for regulation of
pyrG
expression. Primer-extended transcripts were equally abundant in repressed and derepressed cells when the primer bound upstream of the terminator, but they were much less abundant in repressed cells when the primer bound downstream of the terminator. Furthermore, deletion of the terminator from
pyrG-lacZ
fusions integrated into the chromosome yielded elevated levels of expression that was not repressible by cytidine. We suggest that cytidine repression of
pyrG
expression is mediated by an antitermination mechanism in which antitermination by a putative
trans
-acting protein is reduced by elevated levels of cytidine nucleotides. Conservation of sequences and secondary structural elements in the
pyrG
5′ leaders of several other gram-positive bacteria indicates that their
pyrG
genes are regulated by a similar mechanism.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
17 articles.
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