Determining if NUS Factors are Essential in Bacteria
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Date
2006-05
Department
Hood College Biology
Program
Biomedical and Environmental Science
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Abstract
Escherichia coil, a gram-negative bacterium, has several transcription
antitermination proteins or N-utilization substances, Nus. RNA polymerase is modified
by the combination of these Nus factors so that transcription may proceed through
multiple transcription terminator signals. The Nus proteins include NusA, NusB, NusG
and NusE. Classical studies have shown these Nus factors may be important for cell
function.
This research shows that antitermination of transcription is a basic process of
bacterial life and these Nus factors are essential for expression of important genes. Thus
the genes add to the minimal set of genes required to support life. Two approaches were
used to accomplish this task.
First, an experimental detection using recombineering was used to empirically
show that Nus factors are essential for bacterial growth. Second using a bioinformatics
approach, minimal bacteria genomes were analyzed for the presence of Nus factors and
compared with the genomic distribution of the non-essential genes frdA and ibp.
Conserved structural motifs were found for the Nus factors. Absolute conservation of
Nus factors in minimal genomes strongly predicted their essentiality in bacteria.