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The components of the Escherichia coli flagella apparatus are synthesized in a three-level transcriptional cascade activated by the master regulator FlhDC. The cascade co-ordinates the synthesis rates of a large number of gene products with each other and with nutritional conditions. Recent genome-wide studies have reported that flagellar transcription is altered in cells lacking the transcription regulators DksA or ppGpp, but some or all reported effects could be indirect, and some are contradictory. We report here that the activities of promoters at all three levels of the cascade are much higher in strains lacking dksA, resulting in overproduction of flagellin and hyperflagellated cells. In vitro, DksA/ppGpp inhibits the flhDC promoter and the sigma(70)-dependent fliA promoter transcribing the gene for sigma(28). However, DksA and ppGpp do not affect the sigma(28)-dependent fliA promoter or the sigma(28)-dependent fliC promoter in vitro, suggesting that the dramatic effects on expression of those genes in vivo are mediated indirectly through direct effects of DksA/ppGpp on FlhDC and sigma(28) expression. We conclude that DksA/ppGpp inhibits expression of the flagellar cascade during stationary phase and following starvation, thereby co-ordinating flagella and ribosome assembly and preventing expenditure of scarce energy resources on synthesis of two of the cell's largest macromolecular complexes.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2958.2009.06939.x | DOI Listing |
Unlabelled: The bacterial cell envelope is a critical interface with the environment, particularly in Gram-negative species where the outer membrane and peptidoglycan layers coordinate to maintain structural integrity and resist turgor. Although this coordination is essential for survival, the molecular mechanisms linking outer membrane and peptidoglycan homeostasis remain poorly understood. LD-transpeptidases (LDTs) are enzymes that crosslink peptides in peptidoglycan and incorporate D-amino acids, but their physiological roles are not fully defined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: The alarmone (p)ppGpp (ppGpp) accumulates in response to starvation and other stress, leading to inhibition of multiple biosynthetic pathways and, at high concentrations, suppression of bacterial growth. Growth suppression by ppGpp is implicated in the formation of persister cells, which survive antibiotic challenge only to regrow once the drug is removed. However, there is also evidence that low levels of ppGpp contribute to resistance to certain cell wall-active antibiotics in actively growing cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Microbiol
July 2025
School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, USA.
Bacterial cells activate stress-sensing and stress-mitigating pathways by employing a number of transcription regulators, some of which can bind directly to RNA polymerase to activate stress-specific response pathways. However, mutations in the RNA polymerase genes can accumulate under certain selection conditions and activate stress-mitigating pathways in a manner that is partly independent of pathway-specific regulators. In this study, we characterized a novel mutation in the rpoB gene that transforms RNA polymerase into a "stringent" polymerase in the absence of one of the key stringent response (SR) activating factors (p)ppGpp, produced by the relA gene product.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrob Physiol
June 2025
General and Molecular Microbiology, Institute for Chemistry and Biology of the Marine Environment (ICBM), Carl von Ossietzky Universität Oldenburg, Oldenburg, Germany.
Background: The Aromatoleum/Azoarcus/Thauera (AAT) cluster comprises anaerobic degradation specialists (Aromatoleum, Thauera) and N2-fixing endophytes (Azoarcus). Omics-based and genetic studies with associated model strains implicate stringent response (SR) in adaptation to nutrient limitation and plant colonization. SR is well-studied in standard bacteria such as Escherichia coli and known as adaptive strategy to nutrient limitations by adjusting e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrobiol Spectr
April 2025
Functional Genomics Laboratory, Centre for Microbial Research, Translational Health Science and Technology Institute, Faridabad, India.
The key signaling molecules in the bacterial stress-sensing pathway, the alarmone (p)ppGpp and the transcription factor DksA, play a crucial role in bacterial survival during nutritional deprivation and exposure to xenobiotics by modulating cellular metabolic pathways. In , (p)ppGpp metabolism is solely linked with the functions of three proteins: RelA, SpoT, and RelV. The effects of threshold or elevated concentrations of (p)ppGpp on cellular metabolites and proteins, both in the presence and absence of DksA, have not yet been comprehensively studied in or other bacteria.
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