4.4 Article

Rhodobacter sphaeroides CarD Negatively Regulates Its Own Promoter

Journal

JOURNAL OF BACTERIOLOGY
Volume 203, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JB.00210-21

Keywords

R. sphaeroides promoters; transcription inhibition; CarD; negative autoregulation; promoter escape; transcription factor

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [R01 GM37048]
  2. Jack Kent Cooke Foundation
  3. NIH molecular biosciences training grant [T32GM007215]
  4. Department of Bacteriology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Bioinformatic analysis has revealed that a majority of promoters in the photoheterotrophic alphaproteobacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides lack a thymine at the last position of the -10 element, which is highly conserved in other bacteria. The transcription factor CarD compensates for this absence by activating most promoters lacking the thymine. However, the promoter for carD itself has high basal activity despite lacking the thymine and is negatively regulated by CarD, which produces abortive transcripts to limit promoter escape and reduce mRNA synthesis. This negative regulation mechanism differs from classical repressors and other transcription factors that inhibit open complex formation.
Bioinformatic analysis showed previously that a majority of promoters in the photoheterotrophic alphaproteobacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides lack the thymine at the last position of the -10 element (-7T), a base that is very highly conserved in promoters in bacteria other than alphaproteobacteria. The absence of -7T was correlated with low promoter activity using purified R. sphaeroides RNA polymerase (RNAP), but the transcription factor CarD compensated by activating almost all promoters lacking -7T tested in vitro, including rRNA promoters. Here, we show that a previously uncharacterized R. sphaeroides promoter, the promoter for carD itself, has high basal activity relative to other tested R. sphaeroides promoters despite lacking -7T, and its activity is inhibited rather than activated by CarD. This high basal activity is dependent on a consensus-extended -10 element (TGn) and specific features in the spacer immediately upstream of the extended -10 element. CarD negatively autoregulates its own promoter by producing abortive transcripts, limiting promoter escape, and reducing full-length mRNA synthesis. This mechanism of negative regulation differs from that employed by classical repressors, in which the transcription factor competes with RNA polymerase for binding to the promoter, and with the mechanism of negative regulation used by transcription factors like DksA/ppGpp and TraR that allosterically inhibit the rate of open complex formation. IMPORTANCE R. sphaeroides CarD activates many promoters by binding directly to RNAP and DNA just upstream of the -10 element. In contrast, we show here that CarD inhibits its own promoter using the same interactions with RNAP and DNA used for activation. Inhibition results from increasing abortive transcript formation, thereby decreasing promoter escape and full-length RNA synthesis. We propose that the combined interactions of RNAP with CarD, with the extended -10 element and with features in the adjacent -10/-35 spacer DNA, stabilize the promoter complex, reducing promoter clearance. These findings support previous predictions that the effects of CarD on transcription can be either positive or negative, depending on the kinetic properties of the specific promoter.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available