Abstract

The transcriptional response of Acinetobacter baumannii, a major cause of nosocomial infections, to the DNA-damaging agent mitomycin C (MMC) was studied using DNA microarray technology. Most of the 39 genes induced by MMC were related to either prophages or encoded proteins involved in DNA repair. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays demonstrated that the product of the A. baumannii MMC-inducible umuD gene (umuDAb) specifically binds to the palindromic sequence TTGAAAATGTAACTTTTTCAA present in its promoter region. Mutations in this palindromic region abolished UmuDAb protein binding. A comparison of the promoter regions of all MMC-induced genes identified four additional transcriptional units with similar palindromic sequences recognized and specifically bound by UmuDAb. Therefore, the UmuDAb regulon consists of at least eight genes encoding seven predicted error-prone DNA polymerase V components and DddR, a protein of unknown function. Expression of these genes was not induced in the MMC-treated recA mutant. Furthermore, inactivation of the umuDAb gene resulted in the deregulation of all DNA-damage-induced genes containing the described palindromic DNA motif. Together, these findings suggest that UmuDAb is a direct regulator of the DNA damage response in A. baumannii.

Alternate Journal
J. Bacteriol.
Authors
Aranda, Jesús, Bou, Germán, Barbé, Jordi, Adler, Ben, Boyce, John D, Cortés, Pilar, Shingu-Vázquez, Miguel, and Poza, Margarita
Citation Key
143
COinS Data

Date Published
2013 Dec
DOI
10.1128/JB.00853-13
ISSN
1098-5530
Issue
24
Keywords
Acinetobacter baumannii, Anti-Bacterial Agents, Binding Sites, DNA Damage, DNA Mutational Analysis, DNA Repair Enzymes, Electrophoretic Mobility Shift Assay, Gene Expression Profiling, Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial, Microarray Analysis, Mitomycin,
Pagination
5577-82
Journal
J Bacteriol
Volume
195
Year of Publication
2013