A new scientific study has challenged a long-standing textbook model of bacterial gene regulation, offering fresh insights into how bacteria control gene expression. The findings could open new avenues for designing better antibiotics, regulatory inhibitors, and engineered microorganisms for industrial applications.
The research was conducted by scientists from the Bose Institute, an autonomous institute under the Department of Science and Technology (DST), in collaboration with Rutgers University. The study was published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
Background: The Traditional Sigma Cycle Model
For nearly five decades, biology textbooks have described bacterial gene activation using the “σ (sigma) cycle” model.
Key Idea of the Model
- Sigma factors bind with RNA polymerase to initiate transcription (the process of copying DNA into RNA).
- After initiation, the sigma factor dissociates from RNA polymerase. • RNA polymerase then continues with the elongation phase of transcription.
This model was largely based on studies of the bacterial strain Escherichia coli, specifically the σ70 sigma factor.
Key Discovery of the Study
The new research reveals that the sigma cycle is not universal across bacteria. Scientists found that:
- In the bacterium Bacillus subtilis, the σA sigma factor remains attached to RNA polymerase throughout transcription.
- A modified version of E. coli σ70 lacking the region called 1.1 also stays bound to RNA polymerase during the entire transcription process.
This finding contradicts the long-standing belief that sigma factors always detach after initiation.
Experimental Methods Used
Researchers used several advanced techniques to observe sigma factor behaviour in real time, including:
- Biochemical assays
- Chromatin immunoprecipitation
- Fluorescence-based imaging
These methods allowed scientists to track the interaction between sigma factors and RNA polymerase during transcription.
Key Scientific Insight
According to the study:
- Bacillus subtilis σA remains stably associated with transcription complexes throughout transcription.
- In contrast, the full-length E. coli σ70 factor detaches randomly during elongation.
This indicates that the sigma cycle mechanism varies across bacterial species, rather than being a universal process.
Significance of the Discovery
- New Understanding of Bacterial Gene Regulation: The study reshapes scientific understanding of how bacteria regulate gene expression.
- Implications for Antibiotic Development: Understanding transcription mechanisms could help design
- Antibiotics targeting bacterial transcription
- Regulatory inhibitors that block infection mechanisms.
Advances in Biotechnology:
The discovery may aid in engineering microorganisms for:
- Biofuel production
- Biodegradable plastics
- Therapeutic compounds.
- Insights into Bacterial Evolution: The findings provide clues about the evolution of transcription mechanisms across bacterial species.