کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
5528688 | 1548308 | 2016 | 10 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

- IS5 inserts into the upstream regulatory region of the glpFK operon to activate its promoter.
- This process is negatively regulated by GlpR and the cAMP-Crp complex when bound to their binding sites in the same operon.
- Control experiments show that insertion is independent of the selection procedure.
- Wild type cells are subject to this mutagenic mechanism when glycerol is present and cytoplasmic cAMP levels are low.
- We believe this process evolved via natural selection.
Escherichia coli cells deleted for the cyclic AMP (cAMP) receptor protein (Crp) gene (Îcrp) cannot utilize glycerol because cAMP-Crp is a required activator of the glycerol utilization operon, glpFK. We have previously shown that a transposon, Insertion Sequence 5 (IS5), can insert into the upstream regulatory region of the operon to activate the glpFK promoter and enable glycerol utilization. GlpR, which represses glpFK transcription, binds to the glpFK upstream region near the site of IS5 insertion and inhibits insertion. By adding cAMP to the culture medium in ÎcyaA cells, we here show that the cAMP-Crp complex, which also binds to the glpFK upstream regulatory region, inhibits IS5 hopping into the activating site. Control experiments showed that the frequencies of mutations in response to cAMP were independent of parental cell growth rate and the selection procedure. These findings led to the prediction that glpFK-activating IS5 insertions can also occur in wild-type (Crp+) cells under conditions that limit cAMP production. Accordingly, we found that IS5 insertion into the activating site in wild-type cells is elevated in the presence of glycerol and a non-metabolizable sugar analogue that lowers cytoplasmic cAMP concentrations. The resultant IS5 insertion mutants arising in this minimal medium become dominant constituents of the population after prolonged periods of growth. The results show that DNA binding transcription factors can reversibly mask a favored transposon target site, rendering a hot spot for insertion less favored. Such mechanisms could have evolved by natural selection to overcome environmental adversity.
Journal: Mutation Research/Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis - Volumes 793â794, NovemberâDecember 2016, Pages 22-31