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J. Bacteriol., Dec 1995, 7245-7254, Vol 177, No. 24
K Gish and C Yanofsky
Expression of the tryptophanase (tna) operon in Escherichia coli is
regulated by catabolite repression and transcription attenuation. Elevated
levels of tryptophan induce transcription antitermination at one or more
Rho factor-dependent termination sites in the leader region of the operon.
Induction requires translation of a 24-residue coding region, tnaC, located
in the 319-nucleotide transcribed leader region preceding tnaA, the
structural gene for tryptophanase. In the present paper, we show that two
bacterial species that lack tryptophanase activity, Enterobacter aerogenes
and Salmonella typhimurium, allow tryptophanase induction and tna operon
regulation when they carry a plasmid containing the E. coli tna operon. The
role of tnaC in induction was examined by introducing mutations in a
24-nucleotide segment of tnaC of E. coli surrounding and including the
crucial Trp codon 12. Some mutations resulted in a noninducible phenotype;
these mostly introduced nonconservative amino acid substitutions in TnaC.
Other mutations had little or no effect; these generally were in third
positions of codons or introduced conservative amino acid replacements. A
tryptophan-inserting, UGA-reading glutamine suppressor tRNA was observed to
restore partial regulation when Trp codon 12 of tnaC was changed to UGA.
Stop codons introduced downstream of Trp codon 12 in all three reading
frames established that induction requires translation in the natural tnaC
reading frame. Our findings suggest that the TnaC leader peptide acts in
cis to prevent Rho-dependent termination.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Evidence suggesting cis action by the TnaC leader peptide in regulating transcription attenuation in the tryptophanase operon of Escherichia coli
Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, California 94305-5020, USA.
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