12. One of the mechanism is used by bacteria for adaptation to changed environment is altering transcription of their genes. In this regard, which one of the following responses is NOT found in bacteria? (1) A gene with two different promoters for expression in different conditions (2) use of different sigma factors for transcription of genes (3) Expression of alternate α,β and β’ subunits (4) Expression of anti-sigma factors

How Bacteria Adapt to Environmental Changes: Mechanisms of Gene Regulation Explained

 

12. One of the mechanism is used by bacteria for adaptation to changed environment is altering transcription of their genes. In this regard, which one of the following responses is NOT found in bacteria?
(1) A gene with two different promoters for expression in different conditions
(2) use of different sigma factors for transcription of genes
(3) Expression of alternate α,β and β’ subunits
(4) Expression of anti-sigma factors

 

Detailed Explanation:

Bacteria are masters of adaptation. Their ability to quickly alter gene expression in response to changing environmental conditions is a key reason they thrive in diverse habitats.

Let’s explore how they do this—and which mechanism among the options does NOT occur.

 Mechanisms of Bacterial Adaptation via Gene Regulation:

(1) A Gene with Two Different Promoters for Expression in Different Conditions

  • True/Correct mechanism

  • Bacteria often have genes with multiple promoters, allowing differential expression under varying environmental conditions.

  • Example: E. coli rpoH gene has multiple promoters for heat shock and normal growth.

    Concept: A Gene with Two Different Promoters

    In bacteria, one gene can be transcribed from two (or more) different promoters, allowing it to be expressed differently under varying environmental or physiological conditions.

    Why is this important?

    • Provides regulatory flexibility.

    • Enables conditional expression (e.g., stress vs normal growth).

    • Allows the same gene product to be made in different cellular contexts.

    Example: rpoH Gene in E. coli

    The rpoH gene encodes σ³², the heat shock sigma factor.

    It has:

    1. P1 Promoter: Recognized by σ⁷⁰ (active during normal growth).

    2. P2 Promoter: Recognized by σ^E or other stress sigma factors (active under heat shock or stress conditions).

    Thus, rpoH expression is maintained during normal conditions but upregulated during heat shock.


    Diagram Description: Dual Promoter Gene Regulation


    Other Examples of Dual Promoter Genes

    Gene Organism Condition Promoters Involved
    phoP Salmonella Low Mg²⁺ and acidic pH Constitutive + stress-induced promoters
    sigB operon Bacillus subtilis Osmotic/heat/oxidative stress Housekeeping + σ^B promoter

    Advantages of Dual Promoter Strategy

    • Redundancy: Ensures expression under different conditions.

    • Fine-tuned regulation: Allows graded or threshold-based responses.

    • Resource-efficient: Shares same gene product, saving energy and genomic space.

(2) Use of Different Sigma Factors for Transcription of Genes

  • True/Correct mechanism

  • Sigma factors direct RNA polymerase to specific promoters. Different sigma factors are activated under specific stress or environmental conditions.

  • Examples:

    • σ⁷⁰ – general housekeeping

    • σ³² – heat shock response

    • σ⁵⁴ – nitrogen limitation

 (3) Expression of Alternate α, β, and β′ Subunits

  • False/NOT a known mechanism

  • The core subunits (α, β, β′) of RNA polymerase are highly conserved and not replaced under normal or stress conditions.

  • Bacteria regulate transcription through sigma factors, not by changing the core enzyme’s structural subunits.

  • Hence, this is the correct answer to the MCQNOT found in bacteria.

(4) Expression of Anti-Sigma Factors

  • True/Correct mechanism

  • Anti-sigma factors bind to specific sigma factors and inhibit their activity, adding another layer of transcriptional regulation.

  • Example: RseA binds and inhibits σ^E in E. coli, controlling envelope stress response.

 

Expression of Anti-Sigma Factors in Bacteria – Example Explained

Anti-sigma factors are proteins that bind to sigma factors and inhibit their function, preventing RNA polymerase from initiating transcription at specific promoters. This provides bacteria with an additional level of control over gene expression, especially during stress responses.

Example: RseA – An Anti-Sigma Factor in E. coli

  • Sigma Factor Targeted: σ^E (also known as RpoE)

  • Anti-Sigma Factor: RseA

  • Function of σ^E: Regulates genes involved in the envelope stress response, which is crucial when the bacterial outer membrane is damaged (e.g., by heat, misfolded proteins, or detergents).

  • Mechanism:

    • Under non-stress conditions, RseA binds σ^E and sequesters it in an inactive form at the inner membrane.

    • Upon envelope stress:

      • Proteases DegS and RseP cleave RseA.

      • This releases σ^E, allowing it to bind the RNA polymerase core and initiate transcription of stress-response genes.

Other Examples of Anti-Sigma Factors:

Anti-Sigma Factor Sigma Factor Targeted Function
FlgM σ^28 (FliA) Inhibits transcription of flagellar genes until the basal body-hook structure is complete.
Rsd σ^70 Binds to σ^70 and modulates competition between σ^70 and other sigma factors.
NepR (in Caulobacter) σ^T and σ^U Involved in stress response and cell cycle regulation.

 Summary:

Anti-sigma factors like RseA are crucial for:

  • Regulating stress-specific sigma factors.

  • Ensuring the right genes are expressed at the right time.

  • Providing fine-tuned transcriptional control in response to environmental stimuli.

Summary Table:

Option Mechanism Described Found in Bacteria? Explanation
(1) A gene with multiple promoters ✅ Yes Allows flexible expression under different conditions.
(2) Use of alternative sigma factors ✅ Yes Directs transcription in response to environmental cues.
(3) Alternate expression of RNA polymerase α, β, β′ subunits No These subunits are conserved; not replaced.
(4) Use of anti-sigma factors ✅ Yes Helps in negative regulation of transcription.

 

34 Comments
  • Rani Sharma
    May 28, 2025

    Done sir 👍

  • Suman bhakar
    May 28, 2025

    Easy sir 👍

  • Pallavi gautam
    May 28, 2025

  • Arushi
    May 28, 2025

    👍☑️

  • Beena Meena
    May 28, 2025

    👍

  • Parul
    May 28, 2025

    Explanation is👌

  • Shalu Choudhary
    May 28, 2025

    Understand sir

  • Vishakha pareek
    May 29, 2025

    👍👍

  • Monu
    May 29, 2025

    👍👍👍

  • Bhanwar Jaat
    May 29, 2025

    👍

  • Priyam choudhary
    May 29, 2025

    Explanation is too good 💯

  • Prami Masih
    May 31, 2025

    Very nice explanation sir ji

  • Shreeji Charan
    June 1, 2025

    👍

  • Kirti Agarwal
    October 26, 2025

    Alternate expression of subunits of core enzyme

  • Sonal Nagar
    November 2, 2025

    Option 3rd

  • Heena Mahlawat
    November 3, 2025

    Option 3

  • Roopal Sharma
    November 3, 2025

    3rd option is correct

  • Pooja
    November 3, 2025

    Option c is correct
    Expression of alternate α,β and β’ subunits

  • anjani sharma
    November 3, 2025

    Answer c
    Expression of alternate α,β and β’ subunits.

  • Anurag Giri
    November 3, 2025

    Option c is correct
    Expression of alternate α,β and β’ subunits

    • Bhawna Choudhary
      November 3, 2025

      Option C is correct answer

  • Mohd juber Ali
    November 3, 2025

    Expression of alternate α,β and β‘ sub units this response not found in bacteria bcz its can not replaced only conserved

  • Priya dhakad
    November 3, 2025

    Option c is correct
    Expression of alternate α,β and β’ subunits of RNA polymerase are highly conserved and not replaced under normal or stress conditions.

  • Dipti Sharma
    November 3, 2025

    Bacteria regulate transcription by sigma factors, not by changing the core enzyme subunits so this is incorrect statement.

  • Dharmpal Swami
    November 3, 2025

    Answer c
    Expression of alternate α,β and β’ subunits.

  • Sneha kumawat
    November 3, 2025

    bacteria do not change their core enzymes subunit to adap these are structure and conserved not regulatory

  • Anjali sharma
    November 3, 2025

    C is correct

  • Shivani
    November 3, 2025

    The core subunits (α, β, β′) of RNA polymerase are highly conserved and not replaced under normal or stress conditions. So option c is incorrect.

  • Kajal
    November 4, 2025

    Bacteria regulate transcription by sigma factors, not by changing the core enzyme subunits so this is incorrect statement.

  • Rishita
    November 4, 2025

    Expression of Alternate α, β, and β′ Subunits

  • Manisha choudhary
    November 5, 2025

    3 option incorrect h
    Core subunit of RNA polymerase highly conserve hoti h does not replace

  • sakshi vijay
    November 6, 2025

    c is correct option
    bacteria regulate transcription by sigma factors, not by changing the core enzyme subunit .

  • MOHIT AKHAND
    November 10, 2025

    Done sir ✅

  • Neelam Sharma
    November 13, 2025

    (3) Expression of alternate α,β and β’ subunits

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