Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales 2006, Australia
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The general stress resistance of
Escherichia coli
is controlled by the RpoS sigma factor (φ
S
), but mutations in
rpoS
are surprisingly common in natural and laboratory populations. Evidence for the selective advantage of losing
rpoS
was obtained from experiments with nutrient-limited bacteria at different growth rates. Wild-type bacteria were rapidly displaced by
rpoS
mutants in both glucose- and nitrogen-limited chemostat populations. Nutrient limitation led to selection and sweeps of
rpoS
null mutations and loss of general stress resistance. The rate of takeover by
rpoS
mutants was most rapid (within 10 generations of culture) in slower-growing populations that initially express higher φ
S
levels. Competition for core RNA polymerase is the likeliest explanation for reduced expression from distinct promoters dependent on φ
70
and involved in the hunger response to nutrient limitation. Indeed, the mutation of
rpoS
led to significantly higher expression of genes contributing to the high-affinity glucose scavenging system required for the hunger response. Hence,
rpoS
polymorphism in
E. coli
populations may be viewed as the result of competition between the hunger response, which requires sigma factors other than φ
S
for expression, and the maintenance of the ability to withstand external stresses. The extent of external stress significantly influences the spread of
rpoS
mutations. When acid stress was simultaneously applied to glucose-limited cultures, both the phenotype and frequency of
rpoS
mutations were attenuated in line with the level of stress. The conflict between the hunger response and maintenance of stress resistance is a potential weakness in bacterial regulation.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
209 articles.
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