Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, Connecticut 06032
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Previous work has shown that the
katX
gene encodes the major catalase in dormant spores of
Bacillus subtilis
but that this enzyme has no role in dormant spore resistance to hydrogen peroxide. Expression of a
katX-lacZ
fusion began at approximately h 2 of sporulation, and >75% of the
katX
-driven β-galactosidase was packaged into the mature spore. A mutation in the gene coding for the sporulation-specific RNA polymerase sigma factor ς
F
abolished
katX-lacZ
expression, while mutations in genes encoding ς
E
, ς
G
, and ς
K
did not. Induction of ς
F
synthesis in vegetative cells also resulted in
katX-lacZ
expression, while induction of ς
G
expression did not; the
katX-lacZ
fusion was also not induced by hydrogen peroxide. Upstream of the in vivo
katX
transcription start site there are sequences with good homology to those upstream of known ς
F
-dependent start sites. These data indicate that
katX
is an additional member of the forespore-specific ς
F
regulon. A mutant in the
katA
gene, encoding the major catalase in growing cells, was sensitive to hydrogen peroxide during sporulation, while a
katX
mutant was not. However, outgrowth of
katX
spores, but not
katA
spores, was sensitive to hydrogen peroxide. Consequently, a major function for KatX is to protect germinating spores from hydrogen peroxide.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
66 articles.
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