Data from: Genome-wide effects of selenium and translational uncoupling on transcription in the termite gut symbiont Treponema primita
When prokaryotic cells acquire mutations, encounter translation-inhibiting substances, or experience adverse environmental conditions that limit their ability to synthesize proteins, transcription can become uncoupled from translation. Such uncoupling is known to suppress transcription of protein-en...
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Zusammenfassung: | When prokaryotic cells acquire mutations, encounter translation-inhibiting
substances, or experience adverse environmental conditions that limit
their ability to synthesize proteins, transcription can become uncoupled
from translation. Such uncoupling is known to suppress transcription of
protein-encoding genes in bacteria. Here we show that the trace element
selenium controls transcription of the gene for the
selenocysteine-utilizing enzyme formate dehydrogenase (fdhFSec) through a
translation-coupled mechanism in the termite gut symbiont Treponema
primitia, a member of the bacterial phylum Spirochaetes. We also evaluated
changes in genome-wide transcriptional patterns caused by selenium
limitation and by generally uncoupling translation from transcription via
antibiotic-mediated inhibition of protein synthesis. We observed that
inhibiting protein synthesis in T. primitia influences transcriptional
patterns in unexpected ways. In addition to suppressing transcription of
certain genes, the expected consequence of inhibiting protein synthesis,
we found numerous examples in which transcription of genes and operons is
truncated far downstream from putative promoters, is unchanged, or is even
stimulated overall. These results indicate that gene regulation in
bacteria allows for specific post-initiation transcriptional responses
during periods of limited protein synthesis, which may depend both on
translational coupling and on unclassified intrinsic elements of
protein-encoding genes. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.9f2p5 |