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Nucleic Acids Research Advance Access originally published online on October 29, 2006
Nucleic Acids Research 2006 34(21):6102-6115; doi:10.1093/nar/gkl733
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Nucleic Acids Research, 2006, Vol. 34, No. 21 6102-6115
© 2006 The Author(s)
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/uk/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.


RNA

Keeping signals straight in transcription regulation: specificity determinants for the interaction of a family of conserved bacterial RNA–protein couples

Oliver Schilling, Christina Herzberg, Tina Hertrich1, Hanna Vörsmann, Dirk Jessen, Sebastian Hübner, Fritz Titgemeyer1 and Jörg Stülke*

Department of General Microbiology, Institute of Microbiology and Genetics, Georg-August University Göttingen Germany 1 Lehrstuhl für Mikrobiologie, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg Erlangen, Germany

*To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel: +49 551 393781; Fax: +49 551 393808; Email: jstuelk{at}gwdg.de

Received August 3, 2006. Revised September 20, 2006. Accepted September 21, 2006.

Regulatory systems often evolve by duplication of ancestral systems and subsequent specialization of the components of the novel signal transduction systems. In the Gram-positive soil bacterium Bacillus subtilis, four homologous antitermination systems control the expression of genes involved in the metabolism of glucose, sucrose and ß-glucosides. Each of these systems is made up of a sensory sugar permease that does also act as phosphotransferase, an antitermination protein, and a RNA switch that is composed of two mutually exclusive structures, a RNA antiterminator (RAT) and a transcriptional terminator. We have studied the contributions of sugar specificity of the permeases, carbon catabolite repression, and protein–RAT recognition for the straightness of the signalling chains. We found that the ß-glucoside permease BglP does also have a minor activity in glucose transport. However, this activity is irrelevant under physiological conditions since carbon catabolite repression in the presence of glucose prevents the synthesis of the ß-glucoside permease. Reporter gene studies, in vitro RNA–protein interaction analyzes and northern blot transcript analyzes revealed that the interactions between the antiterminator proteins and their RNA targets are the major factor contributing to regulatory specificity. Both structural features in the RATs and individual bases are important specificity determinants. Our study revealed that the specificity of protein–RNA interactions, substrate specificity of the permeases as well as the general mechanism of carbon catabolite repression together allow to keep the signalling chains straight and to avoid excessive cross-talk between the systems.


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