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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2003, p. 4764-4771, Vol. 185, No. 16
0021-9193/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.185.16.4764-4771.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Biochemistry, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61801
Received 24 February 2003/ Accepted 19 May 2003
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FIG. 1. Schematic representation of the roles of mRNA secondary structures and PyrR, as well as the possible role of pausing, in regulation of the B. subtilis pyr operon by transcriptional attenuation. Segments 1 and 2 of pyr mRNA base pair to form the PyrR binding loop; segments 3 and 4 base pair to form a terminator hairpin. Both structures are disrupted by base pairing of segments 2 and 3 as part of the antiterminator hairpin. See the text for details.
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In this paper we demonstrate that pausing also occurs during in vitro transcription of each of three B. subtilis pyr attenuation regions. Pausing at one site in each attenuation region is stimulated by B. subtilis NusA; these NusA-stimulated pause sites are located at positions consistent with the hypothesis that they function in PyrR binding and attenuation.
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PCR primers were chemically synthesized by the University of Illinois Biotechnology Center. Dharmacon Research, Inc., chemically synthesized the GCUG RNA transcription primer. Ribonucleotides were obtained from Promega, and the 3'-deoxyribonucleotides used for RNA sequencing were obtained from TriLink Biotechnologies, Inc. Vent DNA polymerase and the PCR buffer were obtained from Invitrogen, Inc. All other chemicals were obtained from Sigma Chemical Co.
DNA templates. A 591-bp PvuII fragment isolated from pUC19/290 (17) was used as the template for PCR amplification of transcription template 1, which was a 290-bp DNA segment containing the pyr promoter and 5' untranslated leader from nucleotide (nt) -60 to 230 (numbering from the start of pyr transcription) (13). Template 2, a 238-bp DNA fragment amplified from a 560-bp PvuII fragment of pLS622 (10), specified the pyr promoter from nt -51 to 8 fused to the pyrR-pyrP intercistronic attenuation sequence from nt 670 to 848. Template 3, a 308-bp DNA fragment amplified from a 622-bp PvuII fragment of pLS601 (10), specified the pyr promoter from nt -51 to 8 fused to the pyrP-pyrB intercistronic attenuation region from nt 2132 to 2381. The templates were purified by extraction of the PCR products with phenol-chloroform-isoamyl alcohol (25:24:1) and precipitation of the DNA from the aqueous layer with cold absolute ethanol. The precipitated DNA was washed with cold 70% ethanol, dried, and dissolved in RNase-free water, and the concentration was determined from the absorbance at 260 nm. In some cases a Qiagen kit was used to purify the PCR-amplified template DNA.
Single-round transcription in vitro.
Two-step, single-round transcription of B. subtilis pyr DNA templates in vitro was used to examine the kinetics of transcription. In the first step, stable halted transcripts were formed during incubation of a mixture containing 50 nM RNA polymerase, 50 nM template DNA, the oligoribonucleotide GCUG corresponding to nt 1 to 4 of the pyr transcripts at a concentration of 20 µM, and three ribonucleotide triphosphates (rNTPs) for 15 min at 37°C in 10 to 100 µl of transcription buffer (40 mM Tris-acetate [pH 7.9], 10 mM magnesium acetate, 100 mM potassium acetate, 14.3 mM 2-mercaptoethanol, 2% glycerol). For template 1, 12-nt halted complexes were formed by incubation as described above with 20 µM GCUG, 8 µM ATP, 8 µM UTP, and 1.25 µM [
-32P]GTP in the absence of CTP. For templates 2 and 3, 11- and 12-nt halted complexes, respectively, were formed under the same conditions except that GTP was omitted for template 2 and the transcripts were labeled with 1.25 µM [
-32P]ATP. Electrophoretic analysis of the transcription products after 15 min of incubation demonstrated that halted transcripts of the expected length (11 or 12 nt) were the predominant transcripts formed.
After the 15 min of incubation for the first step of transcription, elongation of the halted transcripts was initiated by addition of a solution in transcription buffer containing all four rNTPs and 100 µg heparin per ml to block initiation of new transcripts. The concentrations of the rNTPs in the elongation reaction mixtures were chosen to optimize detection of pausing intermediates and were as follows: for template 1, 10 µM GTP and each of the other rNTPs at a concentration of 160 µM; for template 2, 10 µM ATP, 20 µM GTP, and each of the other rNTPs at a concentration of 160 µM; and for template 3, 10 µM ATP and each of the other rNTPs at a concentration of 160 µM. In some cases, NusA and PyrR were included in the elongation reaction buffer at the concentrations indicated below. Elongation proceeded at 25°C, and 2-µl samples were removed for analysis of transcripts by electrophoresis at various times from 10 to 300 s. Elongation was stopped by addition of an equal volume of 98% formamide containing 10 mM EDTA, 0.1% bromophenol blue, and 0.1% xylene cyanole. To test for elongation of putative transcription intermediates into full-length transcripts, an equal volume of a chase solution containing each of the four rNTPs at a concentration of 1 mM in transcription buffer was added to a 2-µl sample of the elongation reaction mixture, and the reaction was allowed to continue for 5 min at 37°C before it was stopped.
To map the sequences of pausing intermediates, RNA sequence ladders were analyzed by electrophoresis together with the other transcription reaction mixtures. These ladders were generated by including one of the four 3'-deoxynucleotide triphosphates in each of four elongation reaction mixtures at the same concentration as the corresponding rNTP in that mixture. the other deoxynucleoside triphosphate. The sequencing reaction mixtures were incubated for 20 min at 25°C.
Stopped transcription reaction mixtures were denatured by heating them for 2 min at 90°C and were analyzed on denaturing 6% polyacrylamide gels polymerized with acrylamide-bisacrylamide (19:1). The dried gels were visualized by autoradiography; transcripts were analyzed quantitatively with a PhosphorImager by using ImageQuant software (Molecular Dynamics), and the PhosphorImager intensities were corrected for the number of radiolabeled nucleotides per transcript. The half-lives of paused transcripts were determined from semilog plots of the abundance of these transcripts relative to the abundance of the total transcripts as a function of time of elongation (at least five times from 15 to 300 s), as previously described (8).
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-phosphate with 32P) led to the stalled transcript 5'-GCUGAAUAGAUU-3' because CTP was omitted from the initiation step (Fig. 2). Addition of heparin to block initiation of new transcripts plus all four rNTPs allowed synchronous elongation of the stalled transcripts. The concentrations of rNTPs added during the elongation phase were adjusted for each DNA template to give optimal detection of paused transcripts. Samples were taken at various times shortly after the elongation step was started, their lengths and sequences were analyzed by electrophoresis, and the amounts were quantified by PhosphorImager analysis. Pausing was defined by transient accumulation of transcripts of defined length during short elongation times (15 to 30 s) that disappeared with longer elongation times (i.e., they were chased into full-length terminated or runoff transcripts as predicted from the sequence of the template used).
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FIG. 2. Sequences of the terminated transcripts from pyr templates 1, 2, and 3 in the binding loop-pause hairpin-terminator secondary structure. The nucleotide sequences are numbered from the start of transcription of the pyr operon (13), which is position 1. The sequences enclosed in boxes in transcripts 2 and 3 are alterations in the native transcripts that result from fusion of the B. subtilis pyr promoter plus nt 1 to 8 to intercistronic attenuation sequences. Circled nucleotides indicate sequences that form the stem-loop in the alternative antiterminator secondary structure for each transcript. Base-paired segments that form the binding loops are designated 1 and 2, and base-paired segments that form terminator stem-loops are designated 3 and 4, as shown in Fig. 1. The putative pause hairpins between the binding loops and the terminators were assigned as described in the Discussion. H indicates the 3' nucleotides of the halted transcripts that were formed in the first step of the single-round transcription experiments described in the text. Major NusA-stimulated pause sites are indicated by P and a boldface arrow; minor pause sites are indicated by P and a dotted arrow.
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One or more paused transcripts were detected with each of the three pyr templates (Fig. 3). The lengths and sequences of these transcripts were determined by including RNA sequencing ladders in parallel lanes during electrophoretic analysis of the single-round transcripts. For template 1, the sites of pausing were at C62, G73, U81, and U99 (Fig. 3). The paused transcript at U99 was the most abundant, and its formation was much more sensitive to the addition of B. subtilis NusA than formation of the other transcipts (Fig. 4). With template 2, only one significant paused transcript, the 3' terminus of which mapped to U781, was detected (Fig. 3), and its abundance and stability were strongly increased by NusA (Fig. 3 and 4). (A second, less abundant transient transcript with a 3' terminus at C791, which accumulated much more slowly, was also observed; NusA did not alter its abundance.) Transcription of template 3 yielded two NusA-sensitive paused transcripts; one of these was at U2254 and was much more abundant and strongly affected by NusA than the other, which was at C2243 (Fig. 3). Two other possible paused transcripts were detected at A2249 and C2264, which were chased into readthrough and terminated transcripts, but their half-lives were longer than those of the other paused transcripts and were not affected much by NusA (Fig. 3).
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FIG. 3. NusA-stimulated transcriptional pausing from three pyr templates. Two-step, single round-transcription reactions were performed as described in Materials and Methods. The transcripts were analyzed after the times of elongation at 25°C shown in the presence and absence of 0.24 µM NusA. Lanes C contained the transcripts formed in a 5-min chase at 37°C in the presence of all four rNTPs at a concentration of 0.5 mM. RT and T indicate the positions of readthrough (runoff) and terminated transcripts, respectively. The 3'-terminal residues of the paused transcripts were mapped from sequencing ladders that are not shown.
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FIG. 4. Effects of NusA and PyrR on transcriptional pausing and termination from three pyr templates. (A to C) Levels of termination calculated as described in the legend to Fig. 7 for different transcription elongation times with no addition ( ) and with 1 µM PyrR ( ), with 1 µM NusA ( ), and with 1 µM PyrR plus 1 µM NusA () added. (D to F) Electrophoretic analysis of transcripts after various elongation times from which the data in panels A to C were calculated. The gels illustrate the patterns of paused transcripts formed under the conditions used. RO and T denote positions of runoff (read through) and terminated transcripts, respectively. C denotes a 5-min chase as in Fig. 3.
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FIG. 5. Effects of nucleotide concentration during the elongation step of transcription of pyr templates in vitro on the abundance of NusA-stimulated paused transcripts. The concentration of rNTPs during elongation was 160 µM, except as shown, and the NusA concentration was 0.24 µM. In each row the left three panels and the right three panels present separate experiments. (A) Template 1. The 3' terminus of the paused transcript was identified as U99. Transcripts were labeled with [ -32P]GTP having a constant specific radioactivity. (B) Template 2. The 3' terminus of the paused transcript was identified as U781. Transcripts were labeled with [ -32P]ATP having a constant specific radioactivity. An asterisk indicates that the concentration of RNA polymerase used was one-third the concentration used in the other experiments. (C) Template 3. The 3' terminus of the paused transcript was identified as U2254. Transcripts were labeled with [ -32P]GTP having a constant specific radioactivity.
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FIG. 6. Half-lives of the major paused transcripts as a function of NusA concentration in the elongation step. The 3' termini of the paused transcripts were U99 from template 1( ), U781 from template 2(), and U2254 ( ) from template 3. Half-lives were determined from semilog plots of the abundance of the paused transcripts during 300 s of elongation as described in Materials and Methods.
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FIG. 7. Effects of NusA concentration on the levels of termination of transcripts from pyr template 1 ( ), template 2 ( ), and template 3 ( ). The level of termination was calculated from PhosphorImager analysis of the amounts of terminated transcripts divided by the sum of readthrough plus terminated transcripts after correction for the differences in the number of phosphate atoms per mole of transcript radiolabeled by [ -32P]GTP or [ -32P]ATP. Samples were analyzed after transcription elongation for 5 min at 25°C. The data are the means of three or more determinations; the error bars indicate the standard deviations of the means.
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Comparisons to transcriptional pausing in the B. subtilis trp operon. Yakhnin and Babitzke (18) recently used an in vitro transcription system similar to that used in our experiments to demonstrate the occurrence of NusA-stimulated transcriptional pausing in the B. subtilis trp operon, which in its fundamental properties was quite similar to pausing with the three pyr templates. Specifically, the site of pausing was at a position that should allow binding of the terminator protein TRAP to the paused transcript but which should not permit antitermination or termination. NusA increased the half-lives of paused trp transcripts four- to fivefold, which was similar to the four- to sixfold stabilization of pyr pausing intermediates. However, the concentration dependence of stabilization by NusA differed for the two systems. Approximately fivefold-higher concentrations of NusA were required for half-maximal stabilization of pyr pause transcripts than for half-maximal stabilization of trp transcripts, and the NusA concentration dependence was sigmoid in the pyr system and hyperbolic for trp. A sigmoid concentration dependence of the effects of NusA on termination of transcription in the trp system was observed, however. TRAP interfered with pausing in the trp system, but PyrR did not affect pyr pausing. This difference is probably accounted for by differences in the binding sites for the two regulatory proteins on their respective RNA targets. The TRAP binding site overlaps much of the antiterminator stem-loop and probably interferes with formation of the hairpin at the top of the antiterminator that is part of the pausing signal. The binding sequences for PyrR (3) do not overlap the corresponding secondary structure at the top of the pyr antiterminators. Thus, PyrR binding interferes with antiterminator folding but should not affect stability of the putative pause hairpin. NusA alone also stimulated termination of trp transcription in vitro, but it did so with only one of the three pyr templates. However, with both systems the combination of NusA with the regulatory protein resulted in increased termination. It is possible that NusA participates not only in transcriptional pausing but also in termination in vivo with both of these attenuation systems.
What defines a pause site in B. subtilis? The RNA structural elements that are important for transcriptional pausing in vitro have been well defined for E. coli RNA polymerase and coupled transcription-translation attenuation systems (7, 11). For such systems pausing at class I (NusA-stimulated) sites (1) occurs after an RNA hairpin consisting of at least 5 or 6 bp. The stem of this pause hairpin is separated by 10 or 11 nt from the 3'-terminal nucleotide of the paused RNA. Pausing is strongly favored when U or C lies at the 3' terminus of the paused transcript. The available data on pause sites in B. subtilis are more limited, and no systematic study of the effects of structural variants on pausing, such as the study performed with the E. coli his pause site (4), has been conducted. The trp pause sites identified by Yakhnin and Babitzke (18) were at U residues located 11 nt downstream from the base of a well-defined RNA hairpin and were thus in accordance with the previously derived generalizations for E. coli pause sites. The NusA-stimulated pause sites identified in our work also fit reasonably well. However, the putative pause hairpins contain unpaired bases and are less readily defined than generally is the case for E. coli pause sites (Fig. 2). Pausing occurred at a U residue 12 nt downstream from a reasonable hairpin with pyr template 1, at a U residue 12 nt downstream from a rather unstable hairpin with pyr template 2, and at a U residue 10 nt downstream from one of three possible hairpins with pyr template 3. In summary, it appears from our limited observations that class I (1) pause sites for B. subtilis RNA polymerase are determined by the same general RNA structural features that characterize such pause sites in E. coli.
This research was supported by Public Health Service grant GM47112 from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences.
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P and RNA polymerase
A holoenzyme are sufficient for transcription of Pho regulation promoters in Bacillus subtilis: PhoP
P activator sites within the coding region stimulate transcription in vitro. Mol. Microbiol. 28:1187-1197.[CrossRef][Medline]
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