Affiliation:
1. Department of Biotechnology, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi 110 029, India
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
is a slow-growing pathogen and is characterized by a low content of RNA per unit of DNA. rRNAs represent a major proportion of the total RNA pool, and the entire requirement for rRNA is met by transcription from a single
rrn
operon that is driven by two promoters, P1 and P3. This study attempted to analyze the specific role of the
rrn
promoter in determining the characteristically low levels of RNA in
M. tuberculosis
. For this purpose, the activity of the
M. tuberculosis rrn
promoter as a function of the growth rate was studied by
rrn-lacZ
promoter fusion, hybridization, and primer extension analysis in
M. smegmatis. rrn
promoter signals were faithfully recognized in
M. smegmatis
cultures harboring the
rrn-lacZ
promoter construct. In
M. smegmatis
cultures that displayed doubling times varying between 3.06 and 6.5 h, β-galactosidase activity increased ∼sixfold in proportion to the growth rate (μ). There was a corresponding increase in the amount of
lacZ
-specific mRNA, while the plasmid copy number remained essentially unchanged. For any given μ, the P3 promoter was ∼twofold more efficiently utilized than the P1 promoter. Since both promoters of the
M. tuberculosis rrn
operon are regulatable as a function of growth rate in
M. smegmatis
cultures, it is implied that the inherent structure or sequence of the
rrn
promoter per se is not primarily responsible for the observed lack of modulation of RNA synthesis in
M. tuberculosis.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
40 articles.
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