Title: Chapter 8 Major Shifts in Prokaryotic Transcription
1Chapter 8Major Shifts inProkaryotic
Transcription
2Modification of the Host RNA Polymerase
- Transcription of phage SPO1 genes in infected B.
subtilis cells proceeds according to a temporal
program in which early genes are transcribed
first, then middle genes, and finally late genes.
This switching is directed by a set of
phage-encoded s factors that associated with the
host core RNA polymerase and change its
specificity from early to middle to late.
3RNA polymerase changes specificity
- gp28 (1) diverts the hosts polymerase from
transcribing host (2) switches from early to
middle phage transcription gene - gp33 and gp34 The switch from middle to late
transcription occurs in much the same way, except
that two polypeptides team up to bind to the
polymerase core and change its specificity.
4Fig. 8.1
5- Genetic evidence Mutants of gp28, gp34 or 33
prevent early-to-middle, middle-to-late switch - Biochemical data Pero measured polymerase
specificity by transcribing SP01 DNA in vitro
with core (a), enzyme B (b) or enzyme C (c) , in
the presence of 3HUTP to label the RNA product. - Next, they hybridized the labeled RNA to SP01 DNA
in the presence of the following competitors,
early SP01 RNA (green) middle RNA (blue) and
late RNA (red). - Look for the competition for the products
6Control of Transcription During Sporulation
- B. subtilis can exist indefinitely in the
vegetative, as long as conditions are appropriate
for growth. - Under starvation conditions, this organism forms
endospores, that can survive for years until
favorable conditions return - Sporulation is a fundamental change
7Control of Transcription During Sporulation
- When the bacterium B. subtilis sporulates, a
whole new set of sporulation-specific genes is
turned on, and many, but not all, vegetative
genes are turned off. This switch takes place
largely at the transcription level. It is
accomplished by several news factors that
displace the vegetatives factor from the core RNA
polymerase.
8(No Transcript)
9More than one new sigma factors are involved in
sporulation
- At least three sigma 29 (sigma E), sigma 30
(sigma H), and sigma 32 (sigma C) in addition to
sigma 43 (sigma A) are involved.
10The DNA region contains two promoters a
vegetative and a sporulation
11In vitro transcription Plasmid p213 labeled
nt Sigma E or sigma A, then hybridized the
labeled RNA to southern blot containing
EcoRI-HincII fragments of the plasmid
Sigma E has some ability to recognize vegetative
promoters
12spoIID well-characterize Sporulation gene. Rong
prepared a restriction fragment containing the
spoIID promoter and transcribed it in vitro with
B. subtillis core RNA polymerase plus sigma E (
middle lane) or sigma B plus sigma C. Only the
enzyme containing sigma E made the proper
transcript.
13Genes with Multiple Promoters
- Some prokaryotic genes must be transcribed under
conditions where two differents factors are
active. These genes contain two different
promoters. This ensures their expression no
matter which factor is present and allows for
different control under different conditions.
14Spo VG transcribed by E?B and E ?E. The last
purification step was DNA-cellulose column
chromatography. The polymerase activity in each
fraction (red). The insert shows the results of a
run-off transcription assay using a DNA with two
SpoVG promoters.
15Fig. 8.7
16Purified sigma factors B and E by gel
electrophoresis and tested them with core
polymerase by the same run-off transcription
assay.
17Fig. 8.8
18Fig. 8.9
19The E. coli Heat Shock Genes
- When cells experience an increase in temperature,
or a variety of other environmental insults, they
mount a defense called the heat shock response. - Molecular chaperones, proteases are produced.
- At least 17 new heat shock transcripts begins
when at higher temperature (42 oC). - This shift of transcription required ?-32 (?H).
20(No Transcript)
21Infection of E. coli by Phage ?
- Phage ? can replicate in either of two ways
lytic and lysogenic.
22A bacterium harboring the integrated phage DNA is
called a lysogen The integrated DNA is called a
prophage
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24Cro gene product blocks the transcription of ?
repressor CI N antiterminator
Extension of transcripts controlled by the same
promoters. Q antiterminator
25Lytic reproduction of Phage ?
- The immediate early/delayed early/late
transcriptional switching in the lytic cycle of
phage ? is controlled by antiterminators.
26N utilization site
NusA
N function by restricting the pause time at the
terminator
27Antitermination
- Five proteins (N, NusA, NusB, NusG and S10)
collaborate in antitermination at the ?
immediate early terminators. - Antitermination in the ? late region requires Q,
which binds to the Q-binding region of the qut
site as RNA polymerase is stalled just downstream
of the late promoter.
28Highly conserved among Nut sites
Help to stabilize the antitermination complex
contains an inverted repeat
29NusA, NusB, NusG, ribosomal S10 proteins
interfere with antitermination
- Gel mobility shift assay binding between N and
RNA fragment containing box B - NusA N bound to the complex Fig. 8.16
30Highly conserved among Nut sites
Help to stabilize the antitermination complex
contains an inverted repeat
31Nus A and S10 bind to RNA polymerase, and N and
Nus B bind to the box B and box A regions of the
nut site in the growing transcript.
32Fig. 8.15
33Fig. 8.17
Qut Q utilization site Q binds directly to qut
site not to the transcript
34Establishing Lysogeny
- Phage ? establishes lysogeny by causing
production of enough repressor to bind to the
early operators and prevent further early RNA
synthesis. The promoter used for establishment of
lysogeny is PRE.
35Fig. 8.18
Delayed early transcription from PR gives cII
mRNA that is transcribed to CII (purple), which
allows RNA polymerase (blue and red) to bind to
PRE and transcribe the cI gene
36Autoregulation of cI Gene During Lysogeny
- The promoter that is used to maintain lysogeny is
PRM. - It comes into play after transcription from PRE
makes possible that burst of repressor synthesis
that establishes lysogeny. - This repressor binds to OR1 and OR2
cooperatively, but leave OR3 open. RNA polymerase
binds to PRM,, in a way that contacts the
repressor bound to OR2.
37Fig. 8.19
38(No Transcript)
39Run-off transcription (this construct does not
contain OL, therefore, need to use very high
concentration of repressor)
40High levels of repressor can repress
transcription from PRM, may involve interaction
of repressor dimers bound to OR1, OR2 and OR3,
with repressor dimers bound to OL1, OL2 and OL3
via DNA looping.
41RNA polymerase-repressor Interaction
- Intergenic suppressor mutation studies show that
the crucial interaction between repressor and RNA
polymerase involves region 4 of the s subunit of
the polymerase.
42Fig. 8.23
43Fig. 8.24
44Fig. 8.25
45Determining the fate of a ? Infection lysis or
lysogeny
- Depends on the outcome of a race between the
products of the cI and cro genes. The winner of
the race is further determined by the CII
concentration, which is determined by the
cellular protease concentration, which is in turn
determined by environmental factors such as the
richness of the medium.
46Fig. 8.26
47Lysogen Induction
- When a lysogen suffers DNA damage, it induces the
SOS response. - The initial event in this response is the
appearance of a coprotease activity in the RecA
protein. - This causes the repressors to cut themselves in
half, removing them from the ? operators and
inducing the lytic cycle. - In this way, progeny ? phages can escape the
potentially lethal damage that is occurring in
their host.
48Fig. 8.27
49Chapter 9DNA Protein Interactions in
Prokaryotes
50Helix 2 of the motif (red) lies in the major
groove of its DNA target
51The l Family of Repressors
- Repressors have recognition helices that lie in
the major groove of appropriate operator - Specificity of this binding depends on amino
acids in the recognition helices
52Binding Specificity of Repressor-DNA Interaction
Site
- Repressors of l-like phage have recognition
helices that fit sideways into the major groove
of the operator DNA - Certain amino acids on the DNA side of the
recognition helix make specific contact with
bases in the operator - These contacts determine the specificity of
protein-DNA interactions - Changing these amino acids can change specificity
of the repressor
53Probing Binding Specificity by Site-Directed
Mutagenesis
- Key amino acids in recognition helices of 2
repressors are proposed - These amino acids are largely different between
the two repressors
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55The helix-turn-helix motif of the upper monomer
(red and blue) is inserted into the major groove
of the DNA)
56The repressor of the lambda-like phages have
recognition helices that fit sideways into the
major groove of the operator DNA. Certain amino
acids on the DNA side of the recognition helix
make specific contact with bases in the operator,
and these contacts determine the specificity of
the protein-DNA interaction. Changing these
amino acids can change the specificity of the
repressor.
57High-Resolution Analysis of l Repressor-Operator
Interactions
- General Structural Features
- Recognition helices of each repressor monomer
nestle into the DNA major grooves in the 2
half-sites - Helices approach each other to hold the two
monomers together in the repressor dimer - DNA is similar in shape to B-form DNA
- Bending of DNA at the two ends of the DNA
fragment as it curves around the repressor dimer
58Fig. 9.6
59General structural features
60Interactions With Bases
61Amino Acid/DNA Backbone Interactions
- Hydrogen bond at Gln 33 maximizes electrostatic
attraction between positively charged amino end
of a-helix and negatively charged DNA - The attraction works to stabilize the bond
62The most important contacts occur in the major
groove, where amino acids make hydrogen bonds
with DNA bases and with the DNA backbone. Some
of these hydrogen bonds are stabilized by
hydrogen-bond Networks involving two amino acids
and two or more sites on the DNA.
63Hydrogen bonds are represented by dashed lines,
the van der Waals interaction between the Gln 29
side chain and the 5-methyl group of the thymine
paired to adenine 3 is represented by concentric
arcs
64This implies hydrogen bonding between the protein
and DNA at these sites. This analysis also shows
probable hydrogen bonding between three glutamine
residues in the recognition helix and three base
pairs in the repressor. It also reveals a
potential van der Waals contact between one of
these glutamines and a base in the operator.
65The Role of Tryptophan
- The trp repressor requires tryptophan to force
the recognition helices of the repressor dimer
into proper position for interacting with the trp
operator
66DNA deviates significantly from its normal
regular shape. It bends somewhat to accommodate
the necessary base/amino acid contacts. The
central part of the helix is wound extra tightly.
67(No Transcript)
68Fig. 9.13
69The trp repressor requires tryptophan to force
the recognition helices of the repressor dimer
into the proper position for interacting with the
trp operator.
70General considerations on Protein-DNA interactions
- Specificity of binding between a protein and a
specific stretch of DNA - 1. Specific interactions between bases and amino
acids - 2. the ability of the DNA to assume a certain
shape, which also depends on the DNAs base
sequence.
71Hydrogen Bonding Capabilities of the Four
Different Base Pairs
- The four different base pairs present four
different hydrogen-bonding profiles to amino
acids approaching either major or minor groove
72The Importance of Multimeric DNA-Binding Proteins
- Target sites for DNA-binding proteins are usually
symmetric or repeated - Most DNA-binding proteins are dimers that greatly
enhances binding between DNA and protein as the 2
protein subunits bind cooperatively
739.4 DNA-Binding Proteins Action at a Distance
- There are numerous examples in which DNA-binding
proteins can influence interactions at remote
sites in DNA - This phenomenon is common in eukaryotes
- It can also occur in several prokaryotes
74The gal Operon
- The E. coli gal operon has two distinct
operators, 97 bp apart - One located adjacent to the gal promoter
- External operator, OE
- Other is located within first structural gene,
galE - 2 separated operators -both bind to repressors
that interact by looping out the intervening DNA
75Effect of DNA Looping on DNase Susceptibility
- Operators separated by
- Integral number of double-helical turns can loop
out DNA to allow cooperative binding - Nonintegral number of turns requires proteins to
bind to opposite faces of DNA and no cooperative
binding
76Fig. 9.17
77Enhancers
- Enhancers are nonpromoter DNA elements that bind
protein factors and stimulate transcription - Can act at a distance
- Originally found in eukaryotes
- Recently found in prokaryotes
78Prokaryotic Genes Can Use Enhancers
- E. coli glnA gene is an example of a prokaryotic
gene depending on an enhancer for its
transcription - Enhancer binds the NtrC protein interacting wit
polymerase bound to the promoter at least 70 bp
away - Hydrolysis of ATP by NtrC allows formation of an
open promoter complex - The two proteins interact by looping out the DNA
- Phage T4 late enhancer is mobile, part of the
phage DNA-replication apparatus
79Fig. 9.18
80Fig. 9.19
81Fig. 9.20