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2000Arcuri E F; Wiedmann M; Boor K J
Phylogeny and functional conservation of sigma(E) in endospore-forming bacteria.
Microbiology (Reading, England) 2000;146 ( Pt 7)():1593-603.
Conservation of the sporulation processes between BACILLUS: spp. and CLOSTRIDIUM: spp. was investigated through evolutionary and complementation analyses of sigma(E). Alignment of partial predicted sigma(E) amino acid sequences from three BACILLUS: spp., Paenibacillus polymyxa and five CLOSTRIDIUM: spp. revealed that amino acid residues previously reported to be involved in promoter utilization (M124, E119 and N120) and strand opening (C117) are conserved among all these species. Phylogenetic analyses of various sigma factor sequences from endospore-forming bacteria revealed that homologues of sigma(E), sigma(K) and sigma(G) clustered together regardless of genus, suggesting a common origin of sporulation sigma factors. The functional equivalence between CLOSTRIDIUM: acetobutylicum sigma(E) and BACILLUS: subtilis sigma(E) was investigated by complementing a non-polar B. subtilis sigma(E) null mutant with the spoIIG operon from either B. subtilis (spoIIG(Bs)) or C. acetobutylicum (spoIIG(Ca)). Single-copy integration of spoIIG(Bs) into the amyE locus of the sigma(E) null mutant completely restored the wild-type sporulation phenotype, while spoIIG(Ca) only partially restored sporulation. Maximal expression of spoIIG(Ca)-lacZ occurred approximately 12 h later than maximal expression of spoIIG(Bs)-lacZ. Differences in temporal expression patterns for spoIIG(Ca) and spoIIG(Bs) in the B. subtilis background may at least partially explain the observed sporulation complementation phenotypes. This study suggests a common phylogenetic ancestor for sigma(E) in BACILLUS: spp. and CLOSTRIDIUM: spp., although regulation of sigma(E) expression may differ in these two genera.

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