Genes for Small, Noncoding RNAs under Sporulation Control in Bacillus subtilis

Author:

Silvaggi Jessica M.1,Perkins John B.2,Losick Richard1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, The Biological Laboratories, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138

2. DSM Nutritional Products, Ltd., Biotechnology R&D, P.O. Box 3255, Bldg 203/20A, CH-4002 Basel, Switzerland

Abstract

ABSTRACT The process of sporulation in the bacterium Bacillus subtilis is known to involve the programmed activation of several hundred protein-coding genes. Here we report the discovery of previously unrecognized genes under sporulation control that specify small, non-protein-coding RNAs (sRNAs). Genes for sRNAs were identified by transcriptional profiling with a microarray bearing probes for intergenic regions in the genome and by use of a comparative genomics algorithm that predicts regions of conserved RNA secondary structure. The gene for one such sRNA, SurA, which is located in the region between yndK and yndL , was induced at the start of development under the indirect control of the master regulator for entry into sporulation, Spo0A. The gene for a second sRNA, SurC, located in the region between dnaJ and dnaK , was switched on at a late stage of sporulation by the RNA polymerase sigma factor σ K , which directs gene transcription in the mother cell compartment of the developing sporangium. Finally, a third intergenic region, that between polC and ylxS , which specified several sRNAs, including two transcripts produced under the control of the forespore-specific sigma factor σ G and a third transcript generated by σ K , was identified. Our results indicate that the full repertoire of sporulation-specific gene expression involves the activation of multiple genes for small, noncoding RNAs.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Molecular Biology,Microbiology

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