Abstract

ABSTRACT Bacteria can move by a variety of mechanisms, the best understood being flagella-mediated motility. Flagellar genes are organized in a three-tiered cascade allowing for temporally regulated expression that involves both transcriptional and post-transcriptional control. The class I operon encodes the master regulator FlhDC that drives class II gene transcription. Class II genes include fliA and flgM, which encode the Sigma factor σ28, required for class III transcription, and the anti-Sigma factor FlgM, which inhibits σ28 activity, respectively. The flhDC mRNA is regulated by several small regulatory RNAs (sRNAs). Two of these, the sequence-related OmrA and OmrB RNAs, inhibit FlhD synthesis. Here, we report on a second layer of sRNA-mediated control downstream of FhlDC in the flagella pathway. By mutational analysis, we confirm that a predicted interaction between the conserved 5ʹ seed sequences of OmrA/B and the early coding sequence in flgM mRNA reduces FlgM expression. Regulation is dependent on the global RNA-binding protein Hfq. In vitro experiments support a canonical mechanism: binding of OmrA/B prevents ribosome loading and decreases FlgM protein synthesis. Simultaneous inhibition of both FlhD and FlgM synthesis by OmrA/B complicated an assessment of how regulation of FlgM alone impacts class III gene transcription. Using a combinatorial mutation strategy, we were able to uncouple these two targets and demonstrate that OmrA/B-dependent inhibition of FlgM synthesis liberates σ28 to ultimately promote higher expression of the class III flagellin gene fliC.

Highlights

  • Bacteria are masters of rapid adaptation to changing environmental conditions

  • Since small regulatory RNAs (sRNAs) often target several genes in the same pathway [34,35], we hypothesized that OmrA/B may, in addition to flhDC, target other motility-associated mRNAs

  • The IntaRNA algorithm [36,37] predicted base–pair interactions between OmrA/B and the flgM mRNA; the 5ʹ region of OmrA is complementary to the sequence encompassing codons four to nine of the flgM open reading frame (ORF), with codons one to nine matching OmrB (Figure 2(a))

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Bacteria are masters of rapid adaptation to changing environmental conditions Enterobacteria such as Escherichia coli and Salmonella enterica change their lifestyle in response to, e.g. nutritional status to enter a sessile (biofilm) or motile (flagellated) state. These states are generally considered mutually exclusive, which is reflected by complex layers of transcriptional control that promote the establishment of one state while simultaneously prohibiting the other [1,2,3]. On top of transcriptional control, a second, post-transcriptional level involves a large suite of small RNAs/sRNAs (OmrA, OmrB, McaS, RprA, GcvB, RydC, ArcZ, and OxyS) that, via direct regulation of FlhDC and CsgD, affect biofilm and/or flagellar gene regulation [8,9,10,11,12,13,14]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call