Affiliation:
1. Central Research and Development Department, DuPont Company, Wilmington, Delaware 19880-0173
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A sequenced collection of plasmid-borne random fusions of
Escherichia coli
DNA to a
Photorhabdus luminescens luxCDABE
reporter was used as a starting point to select a set of 689 nonredundant functional gene fusions. This group, called LuxArray 1.0, represented 27% of the predicted transcriptional units in
E. coli
. High-density printing of the LuxArray 1.0 reporter strains to membranes on agar plates was used for simultaneous reporter gene assays of gene expression. The cellular response to nalidixic acid perturbation was analyzed using this format. As expected, fusions to promoters of LexA-controlled SOS-responsive genes
dinG
,
dinB
,
uvrA
, and
ydjM
were found to be upregulated in the presence of nalidixic acid. In addition, six fusions to genes not previously known to be induced by nalidixic acid were also reproducibly upregulated. The responses of two of these, fusions to
oraA
and
yigN
, were induced in a LexA-dependent manner by both nalidixic acid and mitomycin C, identifying these as members of the LexA regulon. The responses of the other four were neither induced by mitomycin C nor dependent on
lexA
function. Thus, the promoters of
ycgH, intG
,
rihC
, and a putative operon consisting of
lpxA, lpxB, rnhB,
and
dnaE
were not generally DNA damage responsive and represent a more specific response to nalidixic acid. These results demonstrate that cellular arrays of reporter gene fusions are an important alternative to DNA arrays for genomewide transcriptional analyses.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology