The heat-shock proteins in E. coli are transiently overexpressed af- ter
shift to a higher growth temperature. The genes that encode the HSPs are
preceded by promoters transcribed in vitro by a form of RNA poly- 32 32
merase holoenzyme containing a 32-kd a subunit (Ea ). The a subunit is
encoded by the rpoH (htpR) gene, previously identified as a positive 32
effector of the heat-shock response. Our evidence suggests that Ea is
the enzyme that transcribes heat-shock genes at all temperatures. The
level 32 of a may be regulated at several points: Accumulation of rpoH
mRNA 32 is affected by temperature shift, a synthesis is regulated
posttranscrip- 32 tionally, and a is an unstable molecule with a tl/2 of
5 min. Many mu- tations in the HSPs are shown to have defects in
proteolysis. References Baker. T. A., Grossman. A. D . . and Gross. C.
A., 1984, A gene regulating the heat shock response in Escherichia coli
also affects proteolysis. Proc. Natl. A cad. Sci. US. A. 81:6779-6783.
Bardwell, J. C. A . . and Craig, E. A . . 1984. Major heat shock gene of
Drosophila and the Escherichia coli heat-inducible dnaK gene are
homologous, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. US. A. 81:848-852. Bukhari. A. I. .
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