Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61801
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Expression of the
Bacillus subtilis pyrG
gene, which encodes CTP synthetase, is repressed by cytidine nucleotides. Regulation involves a termination-antitermination mechanism acting at a transcription terminator located within the 5′ untranslated
pyrG
leader sequence. Deletion and substitution mutagenesis of a series of
pyrG
′
-lacZ
transcriptional fusions integrated into the
B. subtilis
chromosome demonstrated that only the terminator stem-loop and two specific 4- to 6-nucleotide RNA sequences were required for derepression of
pyrG
by starvation for cytidine nucleotides. The first sequence, GGGC/U, comprises the first four nucleotides at the 5′ end of the
pyrG
transcript, and the second, GCUCCC, forms the first six nucleotides of the 5′ strand of the terminator stem. All of the nucleotides lying between the two required RNA sequences can be deleted without loss of regulation. We propose that an as-yet-unidentified regulatory protein binds to these two RNA segments and prevents termination of transcription in the
pyrG
leader region when intracellular CTP levels are low.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
8 articles.
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