Journal of Bacteriology, March 2000, p. 1452-1456, Vol. 182, No. 5
0021-9193/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
B
Department of Microbiology, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas 78229-3900
Received 24 September 1999/Accepted 13 December 1999
Stress-induced activation of the Bacillus subtilis
transcription factor
B is transitory. To determine
whether the process that limits
B activation is itself
triggered by stress, B. subtilis strains in which the
stress pathway was artificially activated by the induced expression of
a positive regulatory protein (RsbT) were exposed to ethanol stress and
were monitored for the persistence of
B activity.
Without ethanol treatment, the induced cultures displayed continuously
high
B activity. Ethanol treatment restricted ongoing
B activity, but only in strains with intact
rsbX and -S genes. The loss of other gene
products (RsbR and Obg) known to participate in the stress activation
pathway had little influence in blocking the ethanol effect. The data
argue that stress upregulates the activity of the RsbX-S regulatory
pair to restrict
B induction following stress.
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