Abstract

A cascade of alternative sigma factors directs developmental gene expression during spore formation by the bacterium Bacillus subtilis. As the spore develops, a tightly regulated switch occurs in which the early-acting sigma factor σF is replaced by the late-acting sigma factor σG. The gene encoding σG (sigG) is transcribed by σF and by σG itself in an autoregulatory loop; yet σG activity is not detected until σF-dependent gene expression is complete. This separation in σF and σG activities has been suggested to be due at least in part to a poorly understood intercellular checkpoint pathway that delays sigG expression by σF. Here we report the results of a careful examination of sigG expression during sporulation. Unexpectedly, our findings argue against the existence of a regulatory mechanism to delay sigG transcription by σF and instead support a model in which sigG is transcribed by σF with normal timing, but at levels that are very low. This low-level expression of sigG is the consequence of several intrinsic features of the sigG regulatory and coding sequence—promoter spacing, secondary structure potential of the mRNA, and start codon identity—that dampen its transcription and translation. Especially notable is the presence of a conserved hairpin in the 5’ leader sequence of the sigG mRNA that occludes the ribosome-binding site, reducing translation by up to 4-fold. Finally, we demonstrate that misexpression of sigG from regulatory and coding sequences lacking these features triggers premature σG activity in the forespore during sporulation, as well as inappropriate σG activity during vegetative growth. Altogether, these data indicate that transcription and translation of the sigG gene is tuned to prevent vegetative expression of σG and to ensure the precise timing of the switch from σF to σG in the developing spore.

Highlights

  • Cells across all domains of life alter their phenotypes through global changes in gene expression

  • Global changes in gene expression occur during normal cellular growth and development, as well as during cancer cell transformation and bacterial pathogenesis

  • These results reframe our understanding of how sigG is regulated during B. subtilis sporulation and, more broadly, advance our understanding of how global changes in gene expression can be precisely executed at the molecular/genetic level

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Summary

Introduction

Cells across all domains of life alter their phenotypes through global changes in gene expression. We study a switch in gene expression that occurs during the developmental process of spore formation by the soil bacterium Bacillus subtilis, a premier model system for studies of regulation [2,3]. The smaller “forespore” becomes the mature, dormant spore, while the larger “mother cell” aids the development of the forespore but dies. These two cells lie side-by-side; subsequently, the mother cell membranes migrate around the forespore in a process called engulfment, resulting in the forespore being pinched off as a free protoplast within the mother cell cytoplasm (Fig 1A). The forespore is encased in a protective peptidoglycan cortex and protein coat, and is released into the environment as a mature spore upon lysis of the mother cell

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