Abstract

In the cyanobacterium Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413, aerobic nitrogen fixation occurs in micro-oxic cells called heterocysts. Synthesis of nitrogenase in heterocysts requires expression of the large nif1 gene cluster, which is primarily under the control of the promoter for the first gene, nifB1. Strong expression of nifH1 requires the nifB1 promoter but is also controlled by RNA processing, which leads to increased nifH1 transcript stability. The processing of the primary nifH1 transcript occurs at the base of a predicted stem-loop structure that is conserved in many heterocystous cyanobacteria. Mutations that changed the predicted secondary structure or changed the sequence of the stem-loop had detrimental effects on the amount of nifH1 transcript, with mutations that altered or destabilized the structure having the strongest effect. Just upstream from the transcriptional processing site for nifH1 was the promoter for a small antisense RNA, sava4870.1. This RNA was more strongly expressed in cells grown in the presence of fixed nitrogen and was downregulated in cells 24 h after nitrogen step down. A mutant strain lacking the promoter for sava4870.1 showed delayed nitrogen fixation; however, that phenotype might have resulted from an effect of the mutation on the processing of the nifH1 transcript. The nifH1 transcript was the most abundant and most stable nif1 transcript, while nifD1 and nifK1, just downstream of nifH1, were present in much smaller amounts and were less stable. The nifD1 and nifK1 transcripts were also processed at sites just upstream of nifD1 and nifK1. In the filamentous cyanobacterium Anabaena variabilis, the nif1 cluster, encoding the primary Mo nitrogenase, functions under aerobic growth conditions in specialized cells called heterocysts that develop in response to starvation for fixed nitrogen. The large cluster comprising more than a dozen nif1 genes is transcribed primarily from the promoter for the first gene, nifB1; however, this does not explain the large amount of transcript for the structural genes nifH1, nifD1, and nifK1, which are also under the control of the distant nifB1 promoter. Here, we demonstrate the importance of a predicted stem-loop structure upstream of nifH1 that controls the abundance of nifH1 transcript through transcript processing and stabilization and show that nifD1 and nifK1 transcripts are also controlled by transcript processing.

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