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Identification of a residue (Glu60) in TRAP required for inducing efficient transcription termination at the trp attenuator independent of binding tryptophan and RNA

  • SUNY Buffalo
  • Ohio State University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

Transcription of the tryptophan (trp) operon in Bacillus subtilis is regulated by an attenuation mechanism. Attenuation is controlled by the trp RNAbinding attenuation protein (TRAP). TRAP binds to a site in the 5= leader region of the nascent trp transcript in response to the presence of excess intracellular tryptophan. This binding induces transcription termination upstream of the structural genes of the operon. In prior attenuation models, the role of TRAP was only to alter the secondary structure of the leader region RNA so as to promote formation of the trp attenuator, which was presumed to function as an intrinsic terminator. However, formation of the attenuator alone has been shown to be insufficient to induce efficient termination, indicating that TRAP plays an additional role in this process. To further examine the function of TRAP, we performed a genetic selection for mutant TRAPs that bind tryptophan and RNA but show diminished termination at the trp attenuator. Five such TRAP mutants were obtained. Four of these have substitutions at Glu60, three of which are Lys (E60K) substitutions and the fourth of which is a Val (E60V) substitution. The fifth mutant obtained contains a substitution at Ile63, which is on the same β-strand of TRAP as Glu60. Purified E60K TRAP binds tryptophan and RNA with properties similar to those of the wild type but is defective at inducing termination at the trp attenuator in vitro.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere00710-16
JournalJournal of Bacteriology
Volume199
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - 2017

Keywords

  • RNA binding proteins
  • Termination
  • Transcription
  • Tryptophan operon

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