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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 
 

Characterization of promoter-cloning plasmids: analysis of operon structure in the rif region of Escherichia coli and isolation of an enhanced internal promoter mutant.

Using the promotor-cloning vehicle described by An and Friesen (J. Bacteriol. 140:400-410, 1979), Escherichia coli chromosomal deoxyribonucleic acid fragments derived from the lambda drifd18 transducing phage were cloned in one of several unique restriction endonuclease sites adjacent to tetracycline(tet) genes that lack their own promotor. One of these plasmids has been used to isolate nine variants having mutations that lie in a putative internal promoter which is located between rplL and rpoB. Deoxyribonucleic acid sequence analysis revealed that, in all nine mutants, a single base change, C to T, in the ribonucleic acid polymerase recognition site led to a large increase in promoter activity. Analysis of a variety of plasmids in which tet is fused to various promoters yielded the following results: (i) rplK and rplA, genes for ribosomal protein L11 and L1, respectively, were cotranscribed from a common promoter located upstream from rplK; (ii) there was a strong promoter in the region between the rplKA operon and rplJ, the gene for ribosomal protein L10; (iii) an attenuator region was located between rplL, the gene for ribosomal protein L12, and rpoB, the gene for ribonucleic acid polymerase subunit beta; (iv) transcription terminated immediately after rpoC, the gene for ribonucleic acid polymerase subunit beta'; (v) a gene coding for unknown protein U, which is located between tufB and the rplKA operon, had its own promoter; (vi) the tufB gene was separated from all of the genes described above and had its own promoter.[1]

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