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Microbial Primer: What is the stringent response and how does it allow bacteria to survive stress?

Lucy Urwin, Orestis Savva, Rebecca M. Corrigan

2024Microbiology26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The stringent response is a conserved bacterial stress response that allows bacteria to alter their activity and survive under nutrient-limiting conditions. Activation of the stringent response is characterized by the production of intracellular signalling molecules, collectively termed (p)ppGpp, which interact with multiple targets inside bacterial cells. Together, these interactions induce a slow growth phenotype to aid bacterial survival by altering the transcriptomic profile of the cell, inhibiting ribosome biosynthesis and targeting enzymes involved in other key metabolic processes.

Topics & Concepts

Stringent responseBacteriaBiologyTranscriptomeIntracellularCell biologyTranslation (biology)Protein biosynthesisBiochemistryMicrobiologyGene expressionGeneticsGeneMessenger RNAEscherichia coliBacterial Genetics and BiotechnologyGenomics and Phylogenetic StudiesRNA and protein synthesis mechanisms