Affiliation:
1. Department of Biology, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In many bacterial species, the glycine riboswitch is composed of two homologous ligand-binding domains (aptamers) that each bind glycine and act together to regulate the expression of glycine metabolic and transport genes. While the structure and molecular dynamics of the tandem glycine riboswitch have been the subject of numerous
in vitro
studies, the
in vivo
behavior of the riboswitch remains largely uncharacterized. To examine the proposed models of tandem glycine riboswitch function in a biologically relevant context, we characterized the regulatory activity of mutations to the riboswitch structure in
Bacillus subtilis
using β-galactosidase assays. To assess the impact disruptions to riboswitch function have on cell fitness, we introduced these mutations into the native locus of the tandem glycine riboswitch within the
B. subtilis
genome. Our results indicate that glycine does not need to bind both aptamers for regulation
in vivo
and mutations perturbing riboswitch tertiary structure have the most severe effect on riboswitch function and gene expression. We also find that in
B. subtilis
, the glycine riboswitch-regulated
gcvT
operon is important for glycine detoxification.
IMPORTANCE
The glycine riboswitch is a unique
cis
-acting mRNA element that contains two tandem homologous glycine-binding domains that act on a single expression platform to regulate gene expression in response to glycine. While many
in vitro
experiments have characterized the tandem architecture of the glycine riboswitch, little work has investigated the behavior of this riboswitch
in vivo
. In this study, we analyzed the proposed models of tandem glycine riboswitch regulation in the context of its native locus within the
Bacillus subtilis
genome and examined how disruptions to glycine riboswitch function impact organismal fitness. Our work offers new insights into riboswitch function
in vivo
and reinforces the potential of riboswitches as novel antimicrobial targets.
Funder
HHS | NIH | National Institute of General Medical Sciences
American Society for Microbiology
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
33 articles.
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