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J. Bacteriol., 08 1995, 4619-4627, Vol 177, No. 16
I Mandic-Mulec, L Doukhan and I Smith
SinR is a pleiotropic DNA binding protein that is essential for the
late-growth processes of competence and motility in Bacillus subtilis and
is also a repressor of others, e.g., sporulation and subtilisin synthesis.
In this report, we show that SinR, in addition to being an inhibitor of
sporulation stage II gene expression, is a repressor of the key early
sporulation gene spo0A. The sporulation-specific rise in spo0A expression
at time zero is absent in a SinR-overproducing strain and is much higher
than normal in strains with a disrupted sinR gene. This effect is direct,
since SinR binds specifically to spo0A in vitro, in a region overlapping
the -10 region of the sporulation-specific Ps promoter that is recognized
by E-sigma H polymerase. Methyl interference and site-directed mutagenesis
studies have identified guanine residues that are important for SinR
recognition of this DNA sequence. Finally, we present evidence that SinR
controls sporulation through several independent genes, i.e., sp0A, spoIIA,
and possibly spoIIG and spoIIE.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
The Bacillus subtilis SinR protein is a repressor of the key sporulation gene spo0A
Public Health Research Institute, New York, New York 10016, USA.
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