Title | Heat-shock sigma factor RpoH from Geobacter sulfurreducens. |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2007 |
Authors | Ueki T, Lovley DR |
Journal | Microbiology |
Volume | 153 |
Issue | Pt 3 |
Pagination | 838-46 |
Date Published | 2007 Mar |
ISSN | 1350-0872 |
Keywords | Adaptation, Physiological, Base Sequence, Binding Sites, Consensus Sequence, DNA, Bacterial, Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial, Genome, Bacterial, Geobacter, Heat-Shock Proteins, Hot Temperature, Molecular Sequence Data, Promoter Regions, Genetic, RNA, Bacterial, RNA, Messenger, Sigma Factor, Transcription, Genetic |
Abstract | Recent studies with Myxococcus xanthus have suggested that homologues of the Escherichia coli heat-shock sigma factor, RpoH, may not be involved in the heat-shock response in this delta-proteobacterium. The genome of another delta-proteobacterium, Geobacter sulfurreducens, which is considered to be a representative of the Fe(III)-reducing Geobacteraceae that predominate in a diversity of subsurface environments, contains an rpoH homologue. Characterization of the G. sulfurreducens rpoH homologue revealed that it was induced by a temperature shift from 30 degrees C to 42 degrees C and that an rpoH-deficient mutant was unable to grow at 42 degrees C. The predicted heat-shock genes, hrcA, grpE, dnaK, groES and htpG, were heat-shock inducible in an rpoH-dependent manner, and comparison of promoter regions of these genes identified the consensus sequences for the -10 and -35 promoter elements. In addition, DNA elements identical to the CIRCE consensus sequence were found in promoters of rpoH, hrcA and groES, suggesting that these genes are regulated by a homologue of the repressor HrcA, which is known to bind the CIRCE element. These results suggest that the G. sulfurreducens RpoH homologue is the heat-shock sigma factor and that heat-shock response in G. sulfurreducens is regulated positively by RpoH as well as negatively by the HrcA/CIRCE system. |
DOI | 10.1099/mic.0.2006/000638-0 |
Alternate Journal | Microbiology (Reading, Engl.) |
PubMed ID | 17322204 |
Department of Microbiology