Translational independence between overlapping genes for a restriction endonuclease and its transcriptional regulator |
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Authors: | Meenakshi K Kaw Robert M Blumenthal |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, University of Toledo Health Science Campus, 3100 Transverse Drive, 43614-2598 Toledo, OH, USA;(2) Program in Bioinformatics and Proteomics/Genomics, University of Toledo Health Science Campus, 3100 Transverse Drive, 43614-2598 Toledo, OH, USA |
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Abstract: | Background Most type II restriction-modification (RM) systems have two independent enzymes that act on the same DNA sequence: a modification methyltransferase that protects target sites, and a restriction endonuclease that cleaves unmethylated target sites. When RM genes enter a new cell, methylation must occur before restriction activity appears, or the host's chromosome is digested. Transcriptional mechanisms that delay endonuclease expression have been identified in some RM systems. A substantial subset of those systems is controlled by a family of small transcription activators called C proteins. In the PvuII system, C.PvuII activates transcription of its own gene, along with that of the downstream endonuclease gene. This regulation results in very low R.PvuII mRNA levels early after gene entry, followed by rapid increase due to positive feedback. However, given the lethal consequences of premature REase accumulation, transcriptional control alone might be insufficient. In C-controlled RM systems, there is a ± 20 nt overlap between the C termination codon and the R (endonuclease) initiation codon, suggesting possible translational coupling, and in many cases predicted RNA hairpins could occlude the ribosome binding site for the endonuclease gene. |
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