Litcius/Paper detail

Posttranscriptional Regulation by Copper with a New Upstream Open Reading Frame

Gauthier Roy, Rudy Antoine, Annie Schwartz, Stéphanie Slupek, Alex Rivera-Millot, Marc Boudvillain, Françoise Jacob‐Dubuisson

2022mBio27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Copper is a transition metal necessary for living beings but also extremely toxic. Bacteria thus tightly control its homeostasis with transcriptional regulators. In this work, we have identified in the whooping cough agent Bordetella pertussis a new control mechanism mediated by a small protein called CruR, for copper-responsive upstream regulator. While being translated by the ribosome CruR is able to perceive intracellular copper, which shuts down the transcription of downstream genes of the same operon, coding for a copper uptake system. This mechanism limits the import of copper in conditions where it is abundant for the bacterium. This is the first report of "posttranscriptional regulation" in response to copper. Homologs of CruR genes head many operons harboring copper-related genes in various bacteria, and therefore the regulatory function unveiled here is likely a general property of this new protein family.

Topics & Concepts

OperonOpen reading frameBiologyGeneGeneticsUpstream open reading frameBordetella pertussisRegulatorRegulation of gene expressionTranscription (linguistics)Cell biologyBacteriaPeptide sequenceMutantPhilosophyLinguisticsTrace Elements in HealthBacterial Genetics and BiotechnologyMetal Extraction and Bioleaching