Transcription is punctuated by RNA polymerase (RNAP) pausing. These pauses provide time for diverse regulatory events that can modulate gene expression. Transcription elongation factors dramatically affect RNAP pausing in vitro, but the genome-wide role of such factors on pausing has not been examined. Using native elongating transcript sequencing followed by RNase digestion (RNET-seq), we analyzed RNAP pausing in Bacillus subtilis genome-wide and identified an extensive role of NusG in pausing. This universally conserved transcription elongation factor is known as Spt5 in archaeal and eukaryotic organisms. B. subtilis NusG shifts RNAP to the posttranslocation register and induces pausing at 1,600 sites containing a consensus TTNTTT motif in the nontemplate DNA strand within the paused transcription bubble. The TTNTTT motif is necessary but not sufficient for NusG-dependent pausing. Approximately one-fourth of these pause sites were localized to untranslated regions and could participate in posttranscription initiation control of gene expression as was previously shown for tlrB and the trpEDCFBA operon. Most of the remaining pause sites were identified in protein-coding sequences. NusG-dependent pausing was confirmed for all 10 pause sites that we tested in vitro. Putative pause hairpins were identified for 225 of the 342 strongest NusG-dependent pause sites, and some of these hairpins were shown to function in vitro. NusG-dependent pausing in the ribD riboswitch provides time for cotranscriptional binding of flavin mononucleotide, which decreases the concentration required for termination upstream of the ribD coding sequence. Our phylogenetic analysis implicates NusG-dependent pausing as a widespread mechanism in bacteria.
NusA and NusG are transcription factors that stimulate RNA polymerase pausing in Bacillus subtilis. While NusA was known to function as an intrinsic termination factor in B. subtilis, the role of NusG in this process was unknown. To examine the individual and combinatorial roles that NusA and NusG play in intrinsic termination, Term-seq was conducted in wild type, NusA depletion, DnusG, and NusA depletion DnusG strains. We determined that NusG functions as an intrinsic termination factor that works alone and cooperatively with NusA to facilitate termination at 88% of the 1400 identified intrinsic terminators. Our results indicate that NusG stimulates a sequence-specific pause that assists in the completion of suboptimal terminator hairpins with weak terminal A-U and G-U base pairs at the bottom of the stem. Loss of NusA and NusG leads to global misregulation of gene expression and loss of NusG results in flagella and swimming motility defects.
Since antibiotic resistance is often associated with a fitness cost, bacteria employ multi-layered regulatory mechanisms to ensure that expression of resistance factors is restricted to times of antibiotic challenge. In Bacillus subtilis, the chromosomally-encoded ABCF ATPase VmlR confers resistance to pleuromutilin, lincosamide and type A streptogramin translation inhibitors. Here we show that vmlR expression is regulated by translation attenuation and transcription attenuation mechanisms. Antibiotic-induced ribosome stalling during translation of an upstream open reading frame in the vmlR leader region prevents formation of an anti-antiterminator structure, leading to the formation of an antiterminator structure that prevents intrinsic termination. Thus, transcription in the presence of antibiotic induces vmlR expression. We also show that NusG-dependent RNA polymerase pausing in the vmlR leader prevents leaky expression in the absence of antibiotic. Furthermore, we demonstrate that induction of VmlR expression by compromised protein synthesis does not require the ability of VmlR to rescue the translational defect, as exemplified by constitutive induction of VmlR by ribosome assembly defects. Rather, the specificity of induction is determined by the antibiotic's ability to stall the ribosome on the regulatory open reading frame located within the vmlR leader. Finally, we demonstrate the involvement of (p)ppGpp-mediated signalling in antibiotic-induced VmlR expression.
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