Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry, Leiden University, The Netherlands.
Abstract
In Escherichia coli transcription of the tRNA operon thrU (tufB) and the rRNA operon rrnB is trans-activated by the protein FIS. This protein, which stimulates the inversion of various viral DNA segments, binds specifically to a cis-acting sequence (designated UAS) upstream of the promoter of thrU (tufB) and the P1 promoter of the rrnB operon. There are indications that this type of regulation is representative for the regulation of more stable RNA operons. In the present investigation we have studied UAS-dependent transcription activation of the thrU (tufB) operon in the presence and absence of FIS during a normal bacterial growth cycle and after a nutritional shift-up. In early log phase the expression of the operon rises steeply in wild-type cells, whereafter it declines. Concomitantly, a peak of the cellular FIS concentration is observed. Cells in the stationary phase are depleted of FIS. The rather abrupt increase of transcription activation depends on the nutritional quality of the medium. It is not seen in minimal medium. After a shift from minimal to rich medium, a peak of transcription activation and of FIS concentration is measured. This peak gets higher as the medium gets more strongly enriched. We conclude that a correlation between changes of the UAS-dependent activation of the thrU (tufB) operon and changes of the cellular FIS concentration under a variety of experimental conditions exists. This correlation strongly suggests that the production of FIS responds to environmental signals, thereby trans-activating the operon. Cells unable to produce FIS (fis cells) also show an increase of operon transcription in the early log phase and after a nutritional shift-up, albeit less pronounced than that wild-type cells. Presumably it is controlled by the ribosome feedback regulatory system. cis activation of the operon by the upstream activator sequence is apparent in the absence of FIS. This activation is constant throughout the entire growth cycle and is independent of nutritional factors. The well-known growth rate-dependent control, displayed by exponentially growing cells studied under various nutritional conditions, is governed by two regulatory mechanisms: repression, presumably by ribosome feedback inhibition, and stimulation by trans activation. FIS allows very fast bacterial growth.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Reference34 articles.
1. Effects of promoter strengths and growth conditions on copy number of transcription-fusion vectors;Adams C. W.;J. Biol. Chem.,1984
2. The Escherichia coli protein, Fis: specific binding to the ends of phage Mu DNA and modulation of phage growth;Betermier M.;Mol. Microbiol.,1989
3. FIS-dependent trans-activation of tRNA and rRNA operons of Escherichia coli;Bosch L.;Biochim. Biophys. Acta,1990
4. Cashel M. and K. E. Rudd. 1987. The stringent response p. 1410-1438. In F. C. Neidhardt J. L. Ingraham B. Magasanik K. B. Low and M. Schaechter (ed.) Escherichia coli and Salmonella typhimurium: cellular and molecular biology. American Society for Microbiology Washington D.C.
5. Feedback regulation of rRNA synthesis in Escherichia coli;Cole J. R.;J. Mol. Biol.,1987
Cited by
126 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献