The experiments reported here provide strong evidence indicating that the transposition frequency of the bacterial insertion sequence IS1 is determined principally by two IS1‐specified proteins. The first, InsA, was previously shown to bind to the ends of the element and to act as a repressor. We present both physical and genetic evidence which reveals that the second, the InsAB' transposase, is a fusion of InsA with the product of a downstream reading frame, InsB'. Synthesis of this protein occurs by a ‐1 frameshift between the insA and insB' frames. It requires the presence of an intact retroviral‐like frameshift signal composed of an A6C motif and a downstream region able to form several alternative secondary structures. In vivo studies show that IS1 transposition activity depends on the relative rather than on the absolute levels of InsA and InsAB'. The ratio is determined primarily at the translational level by frameshifting and appears to be relatively insensitive to large variations in levels of transcription. This novel homeostatic control could therefore protect IS1 from activation as a consequence of insertion into active transcription units.
Understanding the mechanism that controls space-time coordination of elongation and division of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), the causative agent of tuberculosis (TB), is critical for fighting the tubercle bacillus. Most of the numerous enzymes involved in the synthesis of Mycolic acid - Arabinogalactan-Peptidoglycan complex (MAPc) in the cell wall are essential in vivo. Using a dynamic approach, we localized Mtb enzymes belonging to the fatty acid synthase-II (FAS-II) complexes and involved in mycolic acid (MA) biosynthesis in a mycobacterial model of Mtb: M. smegmatis. Results also showed that the MA transporter MmpL3 was present in the mycobacterial envelope and was specifically and dynamically accumulated at the poles and septa during bacterial growth. This localization was due to its C-terminal domain. Moreover, the FAS-II enzymes were co-localized at the poles and septum with Wag31, the protein responsible for the polar localization of mycobacterial peptidoglycan biosynthesis. The dynamic localization of FAS-II and of the MA transporter with Wag31, at the old-growing poles and at the septum suggests that the main components of the mycomembrane may potentially be synthesized at these precise foci. This finding highlights a major difference between mycobacteria and other rod-shaped bacteria studied to date. Based on the already known polar activities of envelope biosynthesis in mycobacteria, we propose the existence of complex polar machinery devoted to the biogenesis of the entire envelope. As a result, the mycobacterial pole would represent the Achilles' heel of the bacillus at all its growing stages.
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