Low–temperature sensors in bacteria
Open Access
- 29 July 2002
- journal article
- review article
- Published by The Royal Society in Philosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 357 (1423) , 887-893
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2002.1077
Abstract
Bacteria are ubiquitous colonizers of various environments and host organisms, and they are therefore often subjected to drastic temperature alterations. Temperature alterations set demands on these colonizers, in that the bacteria need to readjust their biochemical constitution and physiology in order to survive and resume growth at the new temperature. Furthermore, temperature alteration is also a main factor determining the expression or repression of bacterial virulence functions. To cope with temperature variation, bacteria have devices for sensing temperature alterations and a means of translating this sensory event into a pragmatic gene response. While such regulatory cascades may ultimately be complicated, it appears that they contain primary sensor machinery at the top of the cascade. The functional core of such machinery is usually that of a temperature–induced conformational or physico–chemical change in the central constituents of the cell. In a sense, a bacterium can use structural alterations in its biomolecules as the primary thermometers or thermostats.Keywords
This publication has 59 references indexed in Scilit:
- Signal Transduction Cascade for Regulation of RpoS: Temperature Regulation of DsrAJournal of Bacteriology, 2001
- Roles of the Glutathione- and Thioredoxin-Dependent Reduction Systems in the Escherichia Coli and Saccharomyces Cerevisiae Responses to Oxidative StressAnnual Review of Microbiology, 2000
- DNA supercoiling and bacterial adaptation: Thermotolerance and thermoresistanceTrends in Microbiology, 1997
- Regulation of Escherichia coli topA gene transcription: involvement of a σs-dependent promoterJournal of Molecular Biology, 1997
- Promoter‐independent cold‐shock induction of cspA and its derepression at 37°C by mRNA stabilizationMolecular Microbiology, 1997
- DnaK Heat Shock Protein of Escherichia coli Maintains the Negative Supercoiling of DNA against Thermal StressJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1996
- Coiled coils: new structures and new functionsTrends in Biochemical Sciences, 1996
- DNA supercoiling and thermal regulation of unsaturated fatty acid synthesis in Bacillus subtilisMolecular Microbiology, 1994
- micF RNA binds to the 5' end of ompF mRNA and to a protein from Escherichia coliBiochemistry, 1990
- Alternative mRNA structures of the cIII gene of bacteriophage λ determine the rate of its translation initiationJournal of Molecular Biology, 1989