Affiliation:
1. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In
Streptomyces coelicolor
,
bldG
encodes a putative anti-anti-sigma factor that regulates both aerial hypha formation and antibiotic production, and a downstream transcriptionally linked open reading frame (
orf3
) encodes a putative anti-sigma factor protein. A cloned DNA fragment from
Streptomyces clavuligerus
contained an open reading frame that encoded a protein showing 92% identity to the
S. coelicolor
BldG protein and 91% identity to the BldG ortholog in
Streptomyces avermitilis
. Sequencing of the region downstream of
bldG
in
S. clavuligerus
revealed the presence of an open reading frame encoding a protein showing 72 and 69% identity to the ORF3 proteins in
S. coelicolor
and
S. avermitilis
, respectively. Northern analysis indicated that, as in
S. coelicolor
, the
S. clavuligerus bldG
gene is expressed as both a monocistronic and a polycistronic transcript, the latter including the downstream
orf3
gene. High-resolution S1 nuclease mapping of
S. clavuligerus bldG
transcripts revealed the presence of three
bldG
-specific promoters, and analysis of expression of a
bldGp-egfp
reporter indicated that the
bldG
promoter is active at various stages of development and in both substrate and aerial hyphae. A
bldG
null mutant was defective in both morphological differentiation and in the production of secondary metabolites, such as cephamycin C, clavulanic acid, and the
5S
clavams. This inability to produce cephamycin C and clavulanic acid was due to the absence of the CcaR transcriptional regulator, which controls the expression of biosynthetic genes for both secondary metabolites as well as the expression of a second regulator of clavulanic acid biosynthesis, ClaR. This makes
bldG
the first regulatory protein identified in
S. clavuligerus
that functions upstream of CcaR and ClaR in a regulatory cascade to control secondary metabolite production.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology
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