Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry and Microbiology, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC, Canada
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In this work, we describe the identification of synthetic, controllable promoters that function in the bacterial pathogen
Francisella novicida
, a model facultative intracellular pathogen. Synthetic DNA fragments consisting of the tetracycline operator (
tetO
) flanked by a random nucleotide sequence were inserted into a
Francisella novicida
shuttle plasmid upstream of a promoterless artificial operon containing the reporter genes
cat
and
lacZ
. Fragments able to promote transcription were selected for based on their ability to drive expression of the
cat
gene, conferring chloramphenicol resistance. Promoters of various strengths were found, many of which were repressed in the presence of the tetracycline repressor (TetR) and promoted transcription only in the presence of the TetR inducer anhydrotetracycline. A subset of both constitutive and inducible synthetic promoters were characterized to find their induction ratios and to identify their transcription start sites. In cases where
tetO
was located between or downstream of the −10 and −35 regions of the promoter, control by TetR was observed. If the
tetO
region was upstream of the −35 region by more than 9 bp, it did not confer TetR control. We found that three of three promoters isolated in
F. novicida
functioned at a comparable level in
E. coli
; however, none of the 10 promoters isolated in
E. coli
functioned at a significant level in
F. novicida
. Our results allowed us to isolate minimal
F. novicida
promoters of 47 and 48 bp in length.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
20 articles.
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