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Elongation Factor P Is Important for Sporulation Initiation.

Heather A FeagaHye-Rim HongCassidy R PrinceAnanda RankinAllen R BuskirkJonathan Dworkin
Published in: Journal of bacteriology (2023)
The universally conserved protein elongation factor P (EF-P) facilitates translation at amino acids that form peptide bonds with low efficiency, particularly polyproline tracts. Despite its wide conservation, it is not essential in most bacteria and its physiological role remains unclear. Here, we show that EF-P affects the process of sporulation initiation in the bacterium Bacillus subtilis. We observe that the lack of EF-P delays expression of sporulation-specific genes. Using ribosome profiling, we observe that expression of spo0A , encoding a transcription factor that functions as the master regulator of sporulation, is lower in a Δ efp strain than the wild type. Ectopic expression of Spo0A rescues the sporulation initiation phenotype, indicating that reduced spo0A expression explains the sporulation defect in Δ efp cells. Since Spo0A is the earliest sporulation transcription factor, these data suggest that sporulation initiation can be delayed when protein synthesis is impaired. IMPORTANCE Elongation factor P (EF-P) is a universally conserved translation factor that prevents ribosome stalling at amino acids that form peptide bonds with low efficiency, particularly polyproline tracts. Phenotypes associated with EF-P deletion are pleiotropic, and the mechanistic basis underlying many of these phenotypes is unclear. Here, we show that the absence of EF-P affects the ability of B. subtilis to initiate sporulation by preventing normal expression of Spo0A, the key transcriptional regulator of this process. These data illustrate a mechanism that accounts for the sporulation delay and further suggest that cells are capable of sensing translation stress before committing to sporulation.
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