The σS (RpoS) subunit of RNA polymerase in Escherichia coli is a key master regulator which allows this bacterial model organism and important pathogen to adapt to and survive environmentally rough times. While hardly present in rapidly growing cells, σS strongly accumulates in response to many different stress conditions, partly replaces the vegetative sigma subunit in RNA polymerase and thereby reprograms this enzyme to transcribe σS-dependent genes (up to 10% of the E. coli genes). In this review, we summarize the extremely complex regulation of σS itself and multiple signal input at the level of this master regulator, we describe the way in which σS specifically recognizes "stress" promoters despite their similarity to vegetative promoters, and, while being far from comprehensive, we give a short overview of the far-reaching physiological impact of σS. With σS being a central and multiple signal integrator and master regulator of hundreds of genes organized in regulatory cascades and sub-networks or regulatory modules, this system also represents a key model system for analyzing complex cellular information procesSing and a starting point for understanding the complete regulatory network of an entire cell.
CITATION STYLE
Klauck, E., Typas, A., & Hengge, R. (2007). The σS subunit of RNA polymerase as a signal integrator and network master regulator in the general stress response in Escherichia coli. Science Progress, 90(2–3), 103–127. https://doi.org/10.3184/003685007X215922
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