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J Bacteriol, June 1998, p. 2936-2942, Vol. 180, No. 11
Department of Molecular Biophysics and
Biochemistry, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520-8114
Received 26 December 1997/Accepted 27 March 1998
The flagellar gene fliO of Salmonella
typhimurium can be translated from an AUG codon that overlaps the
termination codon of fliN (K. Ohnishi et al., J. Bacteriol.
179:6092-6099, 1997). However, it had been concluded on the basis of
complementation analysis that in Escherichia coli a second
start codon 60 bp downstream was the authentic one (J. Malakooti et
al., J. Bacteriol. 176:189-197, 1994). This raised the possibility of
tandem translational starts, such as occur for the chemotaxis gene
cheA; this possibility was increased by the existence of a
stem-loop sequence covering the second start, a feature also found with
cheA. Protein translated from the first start codon was
detected regardless of whether the second start codon was present; it
was also detected when the stem-loop structure was disrupted or
deleted. Translation from the second start codon, either as the natural
one (GUG) or as AUG, was not detected when the first start and
intervening sequence were intact. Nor was it detected when the first
codon was attenuated (by conversion of AUGAUG to
AUAAUA; in S. typhimurium there is a second,
adjacent, AUG) or eliminated (by conversion to CGCCGC);
disruption of the stem-loop structure still did not yield
detectable translation from the second start. When the entire sequence
up to the second start was deleted, translation from the second start
was detected provided the natural codon GUG had been converted to AUG.
A fliO null mutant could be fully complemented in swarm
assays whenever the first start and intervening sequence were present,
regardless of the state of the second start. Reasonably good
complementation occurred when the first start and intervening sequence
were absent provided the second start was intact, either as AUG or as
GUG; thus translation from the GUG codon must have been occurring even
though protein levels were too low to be detected. The translated
intervening sequence is rather divergent between S. typhimurium and E. coli and corresponds to a
substantial cytoplasmic domain prior to the sole transmembrane segment,
which is highly conserved; the sequence following the second start
begins immediately prior to that transmembrane segment. The
significance of the data for FliO is discussed and compared to the
equivalent data for CheA. Attention is also drawn to the fact that
given an optimal ribosome binding site, AUA can serve as a fairly
efficient start codon even though it seldom if ever appears to be used
in nature.
0021-9193/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Translation of the Flagellar Gene fliO of
Salmonella typhimurium from Putative Tandem
Starts

*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry 0734, Yale University, P.O. Box 208114, 266 Whitney Ave., New Haven, CT 06520-8114. Phone: (203) 432-5590. Fax: (203) 432-9782. E-mail:
robert_macnab{at}qm.yale.edu.
Present address: R. W. Johnson, PRI, San Diego, CA
92121.
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