@article {Wong082537, author = {Garrett T. Wong and Richard P. Bonocora and Alicia N. Schep and Suzannah M. Beeler and Anna Lee and Lauren Shull and Lakshmi Batachari and Moira Dillon and Ciaran Evans and Johanna Hardin and Joseph T. Wade and Daniel M. Stoebel}, title = {The genome-wide transcriptional response to varying RpoS levels in Escherichia coli K-12}, elocation-id = {082537}, year = {2016}, doi = {10.1101/082537}, publisher = {Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory}, abstract = {The alternative sigma factor RpoS is a central regulator of a many stress responses in Escherichia coli. The level of functional RpoS differs depending on the stress. The effect of these differing concentrations of RpoS on global transcriptional responses remains unclear. We investigated the effect of RpoS concentration on the transcriptome during stationary phase in rich media. We show that 23\% of genes in the E. coli genome are regulated by RpoS level, and we identify many RpoS-transcribed genes and promoters. We observe three distinct classes of response to RpoS by genes in the regulon: genes whose expression changes linearly with increasing RpoS level, genes whose expression changes dramatically with the production of only a little RpoS ({\textquotedblleft}sensitive{\textquotedblright} genes), and genes whose expression changes very little with the production of a little RpoS ({\textquotedblleft}insensitive{\textquotedblright}). We show that sequences outside the core promoter region determine whether a RpoS-regulated gene in sensitive or insensitive. Moreover, we show that sensitive and insensitive genes are enriched for specific functional classes, and that the (in)sensitivity of a gene to RpoS corresponds to the timing of induction as cells enter stationary phase. Thus, promoter sensitivity to RpoS is a mechanism to coordinate specific cellular processes with growth phase, and may also contribute to the diversity of stress responses directed by RpoS.Importance The sigma factor RpoS is a global regulator that controls the response to many stresses in Escherichia coli. Different stresses result in different levels of RpoS production, but the consequences of this variation are unknown. We describe how changing the level of RpoS does not influence all genes equally. The cause of this variation is likely the action of transcription factors that bind the promoters of the genes. We show that the sensitivity of a gene to RpoS levels explains the timing of expression as cells enter stationary phase, and that genes with different RpoS sensitivities are enriched for specific functional groups. Thus, promoter sensitivity to RpoS is a mechanism to coordinate specific cellular processes in response to stresses.}, URL = {https://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/10/21/082537}, eprint = {https://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/10/21/082537.full.pdf}, journal = {bioRxiv} }