@article{1637, keywords = {Signal Transduction, Genes, Regulator, Molecular Sequence Data, Gene Deletion, Models, Biological, Computational Biology, RNA, Messenger, Conserved Sequence, Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial, Vibrio, Genes, Bacterial, Repressor Proteins, Vibrio cholerae, Amino Acid Sequence, Mutagenesis, Insertional, Sequence Homology, Amino Acid, Luciferases, Virulence, MicroRNAs, Protein Structure, Secondary, Host Factor 1 Protein, Luminescent Measurements}, author = {Derrick Lenz and Kenny Mok and Brendan Lilley and Rahul Kulkarni V and Ned Wingreen and Bonnie Bassler}, title = {The small RNA chaperone Hfq and multiple small RNAs control quorum sensing in Vibrio harveyi and Vibrio cholerae.}, abstract = {
Quorum-sensing bacteria communicate with extracellular signal molecules called autoinducers. This process allows community-wide synchronization of gene expression. A screen for additional components of the Vibrio harveyi and Vibrio cholerae quorum-sensing circuits revealed the protein Hfq. Hfq mediates interactions between small, regulatory RNAs (sRNAs) and specific messenger RNA (mRNA) targets. These interactions typically alter the stability of the target transcripts. We show that Hfq mediates the destabilization of the mRNA encoding the quorum-sensing master regulators LuxR (V. harveyi) and HapR (V. cholerae), implicating an sRNA in the circuit. Using a bioinformatics approach to identify putative sRNAs, we identified four candidate sRNAs in V. cholerae. The simultaneous deletion of all four sRNAs is required to stabilize hapR mRNA. We propose that Hfq, together with these sRNAs, creates an ultrasensitive regulatory switch that controls the critical transition into the high cell density, quorum-sensing mode.
}, year = {2004}, journal = {Cell}, volume = {118}, pages = {69-82}, month = {07/2004}, language = {eng}, }