(Received for publication, October 11, 1996, and in revised form, February 14, 1997)
From the Department of Biological Chemistry and
¶ Center of Enzyme Research, Institute of Molecular Biology,
University of Copenhagen, Sølvgade 83H, DK-1307
Copenhagen K, Denmark
Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) is elongated twice as fast
as mRNA in vivo due to the presence of antitermination
sequences in the 5 part of the rRNA transcripts. A number of Nus
factors bind to RNA polymerase at the antitermination sites and help
confer resistance to Rho-dependent termination of
transcription. In this paper, the effects of the nusAcs10
allele on the elongation rate of both mRNA and antiterminated RNA
were investigated. The results indicate that NusA is required to
achieve a high elongation rate of RNA chains carrying the ribosomal
antitermination boxA and that antitermination is defective when the
rate of transcription elongation is decreased by the
nusAcs10 allele. Furthermore, the nusAcs10
allele had no significant effects on the elongation rate of normal
lacZ mRNA during steady state growth, but it abolished
the inhibition of lacZ mRNA elongation by guanosine
3
,5
-bis(diphosphate) (ppGpp). These results suggest that NusA is the
component of the transcription elongation complex required for
inhibition of mRNA elongation by ppGpp.
Messenger RNA chains are elongated at a rate of 40-50 nucleotides (nt)1/s during steady state growth, and the elongation rate is reduced to 20 nt/s in the presence of high intracellular concentrations of ppGpp (1, 2), which accumulate during the stringent response (3). Ribosomal RNA, on the other hand, is elongated at a rate of 80-90 nt/s, and the rRNA chain elongation rate appears to be unaffected by the stringent response (1, 4). The high rate of rRNA chain elongation depends on the presence of the antitermination sequences in the rRNA transcripts, and the incorporation of such an antitermination sequence, i.e. the boxA sequence, into lacZ resulted in an increase in the RNA chain elongation rate during steady state growth from 40-50 nt/s to 70-80 nt/s and made lacZ mRNA chain elongation insensitive to inhibition by ppGpp (4).
The ribosomal antitermination boxes were identified on the basis of
their homology to the nut sites of bacteriophage (5, 6).
The antiterminated transcription complex of phage
consists of RNA
polymerase in association with the
-encoded N-protein and the host
factors NusA, NusB, NusE (S10), and NusG (7), but the antiterminated
transcription complex for ribosomal RNA is less well defined. It has
been shown that the complex contains NusB and NusG and that it probably
contains NusA as well (8, 9, 10). Furthermore, factors other than the
known Nus factors are needed for proper ribosomal antitermination
in vitro (9).
In addition to being a part of the antitermination complex, NusA
becomes associated with the core polymerase shortly after release of
the factor (11, 12), but the complex constantly dissociates and
reforms during transcription elongation (13). NusA has also been
reported to induce pauses during in vitro transcription, to
reduce the rate of elongation, and to stimulate termination at
intrinsic terminators (7, 13-15).
We have investigated the effect of NusA on transcription elongation in vivo by measuring the RNA elongation rate in a strain containing the nusAcs10 allele. Our results suggest NusA is required both for ribosomal antitermination and for maintaining the high elongation rate of antiterminated RNA, since the nusAcs10 mutant showed a considerable level of premature termination of boxA-lacZ mRNA chains and was unable to sustain a high elongation rate of RNA chains carrying the boxA sequence.
The strains and plasmids used are listed in Table I.
|
The MC4100 derivatives, SØ6100 and SØ6681, were constructed to have the nucAcs10 allele (16) linked with the tetracycline resistance marker, wxz::Tn10 (17). The first strain was constructed by P1 transduction using the nusAts11 wxz::Tn10 strain YN2458 (17) as the donor and the nusA+ strain SØ3829 (18) as the recipient. Resistance to tetracycline (5 µg/ml) was selected at 32 °C. After testing for growth on LB broth at 43 °C, a temperature-resistant colony (SØ6100) was chosen. Strain SØ6681 was constructed by transduction of the nusAcs10 strain, SØ6075 (14), with a P1 phage lysate grown on SØ6100 (wxz::Tn10), selecting for resistance to tetracycline on LB broth at 39 °C and isolating a colony unable to grow at 25 °C.
The isogenic pair of strains, SØ6718 and SØ6719, was constructed to
have the nusAcs10 mutation in the genetic background, MAS90,
previously used for measurements of transcription elongation rates (1,
2, 4, 19). To facilitate this construction, the recombination-deficient
strain, MAS78, was transformed with plasmid pMAS53, which encodes
resistance to chloramphenicol, harbors a functional recA
gene, and has a temperature-sensitive replication function (a generous
gift from M. Sørensen, to be described elsewhere). The transformant,
MAS78-pMAS53, was subsequently transduced with a P1 phage lysate grown
on SØ6681 selecting for resistance to tetracycline (5 µg/ml) at
39 °C. The transductants were tested for the inability to grow at
25 °C (the nusAcs10 phenotype), sensitivity to
nitrofurantoin (the recA phenotype), and sensitivity to
chloramphenicol (the loss of plasmid pMAS53). One cold-sensitive colony
(a nusAcs10 wxz::Tn10 mutant) and one
colony able to grow at 25 °C (a nusA+
wxz::Tn10 strain) were chosen and
subsequently mated with NF1830 for transfer of the
FlacIq1lacZ::Tn5
proAB+ episome by selecting for resistance to
kanamycin on glucose minimal medium at 39 °C. These latter F
derivatives were named SØ6718 and SØ6719.
The bacteria were grown in shaking flasks in A + B medium (20) supplemented with 0.2% glucose, 1 µg/ml thiamine, and 100 µg/ml ampicillin at the indicated temperature. Isoleucine starvation was induced by the addition of 0.4 mg/ml valine. Transcription from the PA1/04/03 promoter was induced by the addition of 1 mM IPTG (final concentration). Transformations with plasmids were performed by standard techniques. LB broth medium and solid media were prepared as described by Miller (21).
RNA TechniquesRNA sampling and purification was performed
as described previously (2); dot blots and hybridization were performed
as described by Vogel and Jensen (1), except that GeneScreen Plus hybridization transfer membranes from DuPont NEN were used for some
experiments instead of GeneScreen membranes. The riboprobe plasmids
employed and the procedure for in vitro transcription in the
presence of [-32P]UTP (DuPont NEN) have also been
described (1, 2). The radioactivity on the dot blots was quantified on
an Instant Imager (Canberra-Packard).
The
transcription times of the lacZ gene on pUV12 and of the
boxA-lacZ construct on pUV16 were determined as the time lag between induction of transcription initiation at the
PA1/04/03 promoter by the addition of IPTG and detection of
specific hybridization to a probe complementary to the 3 end of the
lacZ transcripts. Transcription elongation rates were
calculated by dividing the length of the transcript (3107 nt for pUV12
and 3104 nt for pUV16) with the measured transcription time (2, 4).
While the transcription times measured in these experiments were very
reproducible, the absolute amount of radioactivity in the dots varied
severalfold between identical experiments due to variations in the
specific radioactivity of the probe, the number of times it was used,
and the type of hybridization membrane employed, i.e.
GeneScreen or GeneScreen Plus membranes. Therefore, the slopes of the
induction curves are generally meaningless, and they can only be
compared for experiments where hybridization was performed in parallel on the same membrane. In most cases, the transcription time was determined in two independent experiments, which were separated in time
by days or weeks and included separate inoculation of cultures as well
as growth of cells, sampling, preparation of RNA, and dot
hybridization. However, to simplify the presentation, the two curves
are shown in a normalized way where the radioactivity in the dots from
one experiment was multiplied by a constant factor to superimpose the
one induction curve on the other. The employed normalization factors
ranged from 1 to 25 for the different panels in Fig. 2 and 3.
Determination of the Parameter rs/rt
Determination of the instantaneous rates of stable RNA initiations relative to total RNA (rs/rt) was performed as described by Baracchini et al. (22). Aliquots of the cultures (0.5 ml) were labeled with [3H]uridine (10 µCi, 43 Ci/mmol) for 60 s. Total RNA synthesis was determined as the amount of radioactivity in trichloroacetic acid-insoluble material, while ribosomal RNA synthesis was quantified by filter hybridization with plasmid pKK3535 DNA (23) or pBR322 for determination of background. 32P-Labeled Escherichia coli RNA was used as an internal control of hybridization efficiency.
RNA AccumulationThe differential rate of accumulation of RNA was measured photometrically as trichloroacetic acid-precipitable, NaOH-labile material absorbing UV light at 260 nm as described by Vogel et al. (24).
Determination of Nucleotide PoolsThis was performed using a medium containing 0.3 mM [32P]phosphate (~200 Ci/mol) as described by Vogel et al. (24). The amount of radioactivity incorporated into the nucleotides was quantified on an Instant Imager (Canberra-Packard).
To test the effect of NusA on the rate of transcription elongation
in vivo, we used the conditionally lethal
nusAcs10 mutation, since the nusA gene can only
be deleted in Rho-deficient strains (25). Strains harboring the
nusAcs10 mutation are cold-sensitive and unable to grow at
temperatures below 30 °C (16). The mutation was also shown to cause
a defect in N-mediated transcriptional antitermination in bacteriophage
(16), and it has been proposed to impose a defect in ribosomal
antitermination, because it causes an increase in the rate of synthesis
of tRNAs encoded outside the ribosomal operons, relative to those
encoded inside these operons (10). The nusAcs10 mutant,
SØ6718, and the isogenic nusA+ strain, SØ6719,
were grown in a glucose minimal medium at 34 °C, which is a
semipermissive temperature for the nusAcs10 mutant. The
generation times were 60 min for the wild type and 72 min for the
nusAcs10 mutant.
Transcription elongation rates were measured using the plasmids pUV12
and pUV16 (Fig. 1), which both contain lacZ
inserted behind the strong IPTG-inducible PA1/04/03
promoter. Plasmid pUV12 contains a normal lacZ gene, while
pUV16 contains the minimal ribosomal antitermination boxA sequence and
flanking regions, i.e. the sequence
5-CACTGCTCTTTAACAATTTA-3
, inserted between the promoter and the
structural lacZ gene. This minimal boxA sequence has
previously been shown to be both necessary and sufficient for proper
antitermination in vitro and in vivo (6, 9). Transcription rates were determined following induction of
transcription initiation at the PA1/04/03 promoter by the
addition of IPTG and hybridization to a probe complementary to the 3
end of the lacZ transcripts (see "Experimental
Procedures").
Elongation of lacZ mRNA Chains in the nusAcs10 Mutant
The transcription time of the unmodified lacZ gene on pUV12 was 90 s during steady state growth of the wild type strain at 34 °C (Fig. 2A), corresponding to an elongation rate of 35 nt/s. During the stringent response, provoked by inducing starvation for isoleucine, the transcription time increased to 160 s (Fig. 2C), in agreement with previous results (1, 2). For the nusAcs10 mutant the transcription time was 95 s (33 nt/s) during steady state growth (Fig. 2B), indicating that nusAcs10 does not disturb mRNA chain elongation during steady state growth. However, no inhibition of transcription elongation was observed during the stringent response, since the transcription time was 90 s under these growth conditions (Fig. 2D). These results suggested that the nusAcs10 allele abolished inhibition of transcription elongation by ppGpp, since the nusAcs10 mutant accumulated even more ppGpp than the wild type strain during the stringent response (Table II).
|
For the
nusA+ strain, the transcription time of the
antiterminated boxA-lacZ construct carried on pUV16 was
55 s both during steady state growth at 34 °C and during amino
acid starvation (Fig. 3, A and C).
This indicates that insertion of the antitermination boxA is sufficient
both to elevate the elongation rate and render chain elongation
insensitive to ppGpp, as previously observed (4). In the
nusAcs10 mutant, however, the transcription time of the
boxA-lacZ gene was 80 s during steady state growth
(Fig. 3B), corresponding to an elongation rate of 38 nt/s,
and it increased to about 95 s during the stringent response (Fig.
3D). The elongation rate observed during steady state growth
(38 nt/s) is similar to the elongation rate (33 nt/s) found for the
normal lacZ mRNA and much lower than the elongation rate
of the boxA-lacZ RNA observed in wild type cells (57 nt/s).
These results suggest that the nusAcs10 mutant is unable to
achieve a high rate of transcription elongation despite the presence of
the boxA antitermination sequence.
Transcriptional Polarity
To determine the extent of premature
transcription termination within boxA-lacZ during the
stringent response, we quantified both the accumulation of 5 ends,
which we interpret as the rate of initiation at the
PA1/04/03 promoter, and the accumulation of 3
ends of the
resulting RNA chain (Fig. 4). The slopes of these
induction curves, which were made in parallel on the same membrane to
ensure uniform hybridization, were identical during steady state growth
and during amino acid starvation, both for the wild type and for the
nusAcs10 mutant (Fig. 4, A and B).
This indicates that transcription initiation at the
PA1/04/03 promoter is insensitive to ppGpp, as seen
previously (4, 15). For the wild type strain, the slopes of the curves
representing the accumulation of 3
ends of the boxA-lacZ
transcripts were also identical during steady state growth and amino
acid starvation (Fig. 4C), but for the nusAcs10
mutant, the rate of accumulation of 3
ends of the boxA-lacZ
transcript was reduced 4-fold after the onset of amino acid starvation
(Fig. 4D). Therefore, we conclude that the minimal ribosomal
boxA sequence is unable to suppress premature transcription termination
in a strain harboring the nusAcs10 mutation.
The transcription elongation rates measured for the two transcripts under different growth conditions are summarized in Table III.
|
The
inhibition of transcription elongation, normally observed during the
stringent response, has been proposed by Jensen and Pedersen (26) to
play a major role in the passive regulation of rRNA synthesis by
sequestering RNA polymerase in the elongation phase and thus lowering
the concentration of free RNA polymerase. Since the nusAcs10
mutant did not change the transcription elongation rate of mRNA, it
could be used to test if the decreased mRNA elongation rate is
important for the regulation of stable RNA synthesis during the
stringent response. The rate of total RNA synthesis, measured as the
incorporation of [3H]uridine into acid-insoluble material
during 60-s pulses (Fig. 5A) or as the UV
absorption of alkaline RNA hydrolysates (not shown), decreased strongly
both in the nusA+ strain and the
nusAcs10 mutant after the onset of amino acid starvation.
Furthermore, the parameter
rs/rt, which represents the fraction of de novo RNA synthesis devoted to stable RNA,
decreased from 0.45 to 0.30 during the stringent response both for the
wild type strain and for the nusAcs10 mutant (Fig.
5B). This indicates that relative rates of initiation of
mRNA and rRNA synthesis is normally regulated during the stringent
response in the nusAcs10 mutant despite the constant RNA
chain elongation rate.
Our results show that antiterminated
boxA-lacZ RNA is elongated at a slower rate in
the nusAcs10 mutant than in the wild type strain, and that
the nusAcs10 allele abolishes the inhibition of normal
lacZ mRNA chain elongation by ppGpp without affecting the elongation rate during steady state growth. The nusAcs10
allele contains two different mutations, which, in combination, confer cold sensitivity to the host (27). When the two mutations are separated, the -plating type is linked to the mutation at nucleotide 634 in the nusA gene. It is therefore possible that the two
different effects of nusAcs10, i.e. the decreased
elongation rate of antiterminated RNA and the resistance to ppGpp
inhibition, are caused by different mutations.
The nusAcs10 allele prevented boxA-mediated suppression of polarity in the boxA-lacZ transcript, suggesting that the mutant is unable to antiterminate rRNA normally, in agreement with the observations of Sharrock et al. (10). Ribosomal antitermination is equivalent to the suppression of Rho-dependent transcription termination in the rrn operons (28, 29) and Rho-dependent termination has been proposed to depend on the kinetic coupling between the RNA polymerase and Rho (30). Thus, it is possible that the antiterminated RNA polymerase may simply escape Rho-dependent termination by running away from Rho as suggested by several groups (7, 28, 30). Our results are in agreement with this interpretation.
The observation that the nusAcs10 mutation caused resistance to inhibition of normal lacZ mRNA elongation by ppGpp indicates that NusA is part of the elongation complex for normal mRNA in vivo. This is in agreement with several previous observations from both in vitro and in vivo experiments (12-14). However, it also indicates that NusA is important for inhibition of mRNA chain elongation by ppGpp, although Kingston et al. (15) observed that ppGpp inhibited elongation of the early transcript of phage T7 in vitro without adding the NusA protein to the transcription mixtures.
We found that the ratio between rRNA and total RNA initiations (rs/rt) decreased from 0.45 to 0.30 following induction of amino acid starvation, both in the nusAcs10 mutant and in the isogenic nusA+ strain. This indicates that the ratio between rRNA and mRNA synthesis is normally regulated in the nusAcs10 mutant during amino acid starvation and, thus, that the inhibition of transcription elongation and pausing by ppGpp does not play the major role in the regulation of rRNA synthesis during the stringent response as proposed by Jensen and Pedersen (Ref. 26; but see Ref. 31). The nusAcs10 mutant, however, incorporated about 60% more [3H]uracil in RNA during the pulse labeling under conditions of steady state growth (Fig. 5A). This may be the result of an increased labeling of the UTP pool resulting from the increased GTP pool in the nusAcs10 mutant, because uracil phosphoribosyltransferase is allosterically activated by GTP (32, 33). Alternatively, it may be that the nusAcs10 mutant has an increased capacity for total RNA synthesis despite the normal partitioning of RNA polymerase between mRNA and stable RNA initiations (rs/rt). The elevated pool of ppGpp may be taken as an indication of an increased mRNA pool in the nusAcs10 mutant, which has previously been observed following induction of a stable version of the lacZ mRNA (34).
In summary, our results strongly indicate that NusA is part of the ribosomal antitermination complex, where it helps RNA polymerase to increase the elongation rate thereby preventing Rho-dependent premature termination, and they suggest a close relationship between a high elongation rate and the degree of antitermination. The results also indicate that NusA is part of the transcription elongation complex for mRNA synthesis and mediates the sensitivity of the elongating RNA polymerase to ppGpp.
We thank Michael Sørensen, Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Institute of Molecular Biology, University of Copenhagen, for letting us use pMAS53 prior to publication. We thank Carsten Petersen and Karsten Tedin for helpful discussions and for critical reading of the manuscript.