A Mg2+-responding RNA that controls the expression of a Mg 2+ transporter

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Abstract

Mg2+ is the most abundant divalent cation in biological systems. It is required for ATP-mediated enzymatic reactions and as a stabilizer of ribosomes and membranes. The enteric bacterium Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium harbors three Mg2+ transporters and a regulatory system-termed PhoP/PhoQ-whose activity is regulated by the extracytoplasmic levels of Mg2+. We have determined that expression of the PhoP-activated Mg2+ transporter MgtA is also controlled by its 5′-untranslated region (5′UTR). The 5′UTR of the mgtA gene can adopt different stem-loop structures depending on the Mg2+ levels, which determine whether transcription reads through into the mgtA-coding region or stops within the 5′UTR. This makes the mgtA 5′UTR the first example of a cation-responding riboswitch. The initiation of mgtA transcription responds to extracytoplasmic Mg2+, and its elongation into the coding region to cytoplasmic Mg2+, which provides a singular example where the same ligand is sensed in different cellular compartments to regulate disparate steps in gene transcription. The PhoP-activated Mg2+ transporter MgtB is also regulated by Mg2+ in a strain lacking the Mg2+ sensor PhoQ, suggesting the presence of additional Mg 2+-responding devices. © 2006 Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.

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Groisman, E. A., Cromie, M. J., Shi, Y., & Latifi, T. (2006). A Mg2+-responding RNA that controls the expression of a Mg 2+ transporter. In Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology (Vol. 71, pp. 251–258). https://doi.org/10.1101/sqb.2006.71.005

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