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The Bacillus subtilis global transition-state regulator AbrB specifically recognizes over 60 different DNA regulatory regions of genes expressed during cellular response to suboptimal environments. Most interestingly the DNA regions recognized by AbrB share no obvious consensus base sequence. To more clearly understand the functional aspects of AbrB activity, microelectrospray ionization mass spectrometry has been employed to resolve the macromolecular assembly of unbound and DNA-bound AbrB. Analysis of the N-terminal DNA binding domain of AbrB (AbrBN53, residues 1-53) demonstrates that AbrBN53 is a stable dimer, showing no apparent exchange with a monomeric form as a function of pH, ionic strength, solvent, or protein concentration. AbrBN53 demonstrates a capacity for DNA binding, underscoring the role of the N-terminal domain in both DNA recognition and dimerization. Full-length AbrB is shown to exist as a homotetramer. An investigation of the binding of AbrBN53 and AbrB to the natural DNA target element sinIR shows that AbrBN53 binds as a dimer and AbrB binds as a tetramer. This study represents the first detailed characterization of the stoichiometry of a transition-state regulator binding to one of its target promoters.  相似文献   

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We have developed on-line pseudo cell-size exclusion chromatography-mass spectrometry (PsC-SEC-MS) for the rapid, real time analyses of noncovalently bound protein complexes. The methodology can be used to determine constituent components of such complexes, as well as exact stoichiometries. Furthermore, it enables the efficient determination of gross conformational changes upon complexation. The power of the new approach is demonstrated in the analysis of the global transition-state regulator AbrB and its complex with a target DNA sequence from the promoter sinIR. Using PsC-SEC-MS, we confirm that AbrB is assembled as a homotetramer and not as a homohexamer as previously suggested. Additionally, we show that AbrB binds to the sinIR DNA target element as a homotetramer, affording a 4:1 protein:DNA stoichiometry. Finally, we demonstrate that when the complex binds to sinIR, the hydrodynamic volume (size) of the complex is notably reduced compared to that of the apoprotein, indicating a protein conformational change.  相似文献   

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The Bacillus subtilis transition state regulator AbrB(su) is a DNA-binding protein that acts on several genes either as activator, repressor, or preventer. However, among genes under its control, neither common binding sites could be identified nor could the structural features of this broad and specific interaction be elucidated. Attempts to elucidate these interesting features by crystallizing AbrB(su) have failed so far. Therefore, to solve this problem, we focused in this work on identifying an AbrB(su) homologue from Bacillus stearothermophilus. Using a novel method, the entire abrB(st) gene of B. stearothermophilus was cloned and sequenced. The gene encodes a 95 amino acid protein that shows 77% identity and 85% similarity to the mesophilic B. subtilis protein. A calmodulin binding peptide-tagged fusion of the thermophilic gene was constructed for overexpression and efficient affinity column purification of the AbrB(st) protein. The purified protein showed, after removal of the tag, an oligomerization behavior through hexamer formation that is essential for its DNA binding activity.  相似文献   

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Bacterial biofilms are notorious for their ability to protect bacteria from environmental challenges, most importantly the action of antibiotics. Bacillus subtilis is an extensively studied model organism used to understand the process of biofilm formation. A complex network of principal regulatory proteins including Spo0A, AbrB, AbbA, Abh, SinR, SinI, SlrR, and RemA, work in concert to transition B. subtilis from the free-swimming planktonic state to the biofilm state. In this review, we explore, connect, and summarize decades worth of structural and biochemical studies that have elucidated this protein signaling network. Since structure dictates function, unraveling aspects of protein molecular mechanisms will allow us to devise ways to exploit critical features of the biofilm regulatory pathway, such as possible therapeutic intervention. This review pools our current knowledge base of B. subtilis biofilm regulatory proteins and highlights potential therapeutic intervention points.  相似文献   

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We have thoroughly investigated the abrB2 gene (sll0822) encoding an AbrB-like regulator in the wild-type strain of the model cyanobacterium Synechocystis strain PCC6803. We report that abrB2 is expressed from an active but atypical promoter that possesses an extended -10 element (TGTAATAT) that compensates for the absence of a -35 box. Strengthening the biological significance of these data, we found that the occurrence of an extended -10 promoter box and the absence of a -35 element are two well-conserved features in abrB2 genes from other cyanobacteria. We also show that AbrB2 is an autorepressor that is dispensable to cell growth under standard laboratory conditions. Furthermore, we demonstrate that AbrB2 also represses the hox operon, which encodes the Ni-Fe hydrogenase of biotechnological interest, and that the hox operon is weakly expressed even though it possesses the two sequences resembling canonical -10 and -35 promoter boxes. In both the AbrB2-repressed promoters of the abrB2 gene and the hox operon, we found a repeated DNA motif [TT-(N(5))-AAC], which could be involved in AbrB2 repression. Supporting this hypothesis, we found that a TT-to-GG mutation of one of these elements increased the activity of the abrB2 promoter. We think that our abrB2-deleted mutant with increased expression of the hox operon and hydrogenase activity, together with the reporter plasmids we constructed to analyze the abrB2 gene and the hox operon, will serve as useful tools to decipher the function and the regulation of hydrogen production in Synechocystis.  相似文献   

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sinR encodes a tetrameric repressor of genes required for biofilm formation in Bacillus subtilis. sinI, which is transcribed under Spo0A control, encodes a dimeric protein that binds to SinR to form a SinR-SinI heterodimer in which the DNA-binding functions of SinR are abrogated and repression of biofilm genes is relieved. The heterodimer-forming surface comprises residues conserved between SinR and SinI. Each forms a pair of α-helices that hook together to form an intermolecular four-helix bundle. Here, we are interested in the assembly of the SinR tetramer and its binding to DNA. Size-exclusion chromatography with multi-angle laser light scattering and crystallographic analysis reveal that a DNA-binding fragment of SinR (residues 1-69) is a monomer, while a SinI-binding fragment (residues 74-111) is a tetramer arranged as a dimer of dimers. The SinR(74-111) chain forms two α-helices with the organisation of the dimer similar to that observed in the SinR-SinI complex. The tetramer is formed through interactions of residues at the C-termini of the four chains. A model of the intact SinR tetramer in which the DNA binding domains surround the tetramerisation core was built. Fluorescence anisotropy and surface plasmon resonance experiments showed that SinR binds to an oligonucleotide duplex, 5′-TTTGTTCTCTAAAGAGAACTTA-3′, containing a pair of SinR consensus sequences in inverted orientation with a Kd of 300 nM. The implications of these data for promoter binding and the curious quaternary structural transitions of SinR upon binding to (i) SinI and (ii) the SinR-like protein SlrR, which “repurposes” SinR as a repressor of autolysin and motility genes, are discussed.  相似文献   

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DNase I footprinting experiments showed that AbrB binds to the regulatory regions of the spo0H, kinB, ftsAZ, and pbpE genes. A conserved motif was found in these and other AbrB-binding sites. A search for Bacillus subtilis DNA sequences containing this motif led to the prediction that AbrB would bind to the promoter controlling the bsuB1 methylase gene. DNase I footprinting experiments confirmed this prediction.  相似文献   

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Staphylococcus aureus possesses a multitude of mechanisms by which it can obtain iron during growth under iron starvation conditions. It expresses an effective heme acquisition system (the iron-regulated surface determinant system), it produces two carboxylate-type siderophores staphyloferrin A and staphyloferrin B (SB), and it expresses transporters for many other siderophores that it does not synthesize. The ferric uptake regulator protein regulates expression of genes encoding all of these systems. Mechanisms of fine-tuning expression of iron-regulated genes, beyond simple iron regulation via ferric uptake regulator, have not been uncovered in this organism. Here, we identify the ninth gene of the sbn operon, sbnI, as encoding a ParB/Spo0J-like protein that is required for expression of genes in the sbn operon from sbnD onward. Expression of sbnD–I is drastically decreased in an sbnI mutant, and the mutant does not synthesize detectable SB during early phases of growth. Thus, SB-mediated iron acquisition is impaired in an sbnI mutant strain. We show that the protein forms dimers and tetramers in solution and binds to DNA within the sbnC coding region. Moreover, we show that SbnI binds heme and that heme-bound SbnI does not bind DNA. Finally, we show that providing exogenous heme to S. aureus growing in an iron-free medium results in delayed synthesis of SB. This is the first study in S. aureus that identifies a DNA-binding regulatory protein that senses heme to control gene expression for siderophore synthesis.  相似文献   

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New relationships found in the process of updating the structural classification of proteins (SCOP) database resulted in the revision of the structure of the N-terminal, DNA-binding domain of the transition state regulator AbrB. The dimeric AbrB domain shares a common fold with the addiction antidote MazE and the subunit of uncharacterized protein MraZ implicated in cell division and cell envelope formation. It has a detectable sequence similarity to both MazE and MraZ thus providing an evolutionary link between the two proteins. The putative DNA-binding site of AbrB is found on the same face as the DNA-binding site of MazE and appears similar, both in structure and sequence, to the exposed conserved region of MraZ. This strongly suggests that MraZ also binds DNA and allows for a consensus model of DNA recognition by the members of this novel protein superfamily.  相似文献   

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The SOS response to DNA damage in Escherichia coli involves at least 43 genes, all under the control of the LexA repressor. Activation of these genes occurs when the LexA repressor cleaves itself, a reaction catalyzed by an active, extended RecA filament formed on DNA. It has been shown that the LexA repressor binds within the deep groove of this nucleoprotein filament, and presumably, cleavage occurs in this groove. Bacteriophages, such as λ, have repressors (cI) that are structural homologs of LexA and also undergo self-cleavage when SOS is induced. It has been puzzling that some mutations in RecA that affect the cleavage of repressors are in the C-terminal domain (CTD) far from the groove where cleavage is thought to occur. In addition, it has been shown that the rate of cleavage of cI by RecA is dependent upon both the substrate on which RecA is polymerized and the ATP analog used. Electron microscopy and three-dimensional reconstructions show that the conformation and dynamics of RecA's CTD are also modulated by the polynucleotide substrate and ATP analog. Under conditions where the repressor cleavage rates are the highest, cI is coordinated within the groove by contacts with RecA's CTD. These observations provide a framework for understanding previous genetic and biochemical observations.  相似文献   

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Fur (ferric uptake regulator) proteins are involved in the control of a variety of processes in most prokaryotes. Although it is assumed that this regulator binds its DNA targets as a dimer, the way in which this interaction occurs remains unknown. We have focused on FurA from the cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. PCC 7120. To assess the molecular mechanism by which FurA specifically binds to “iron boxes” in PfurA, we examined the topology arrangement of FurA–DNA complexes by atomic force microscopy. Interestingly, FurA–PfurA complexes exhibit several populations, in which one is the predominant and depends clearly on the regulator/promoter ratio on the environment. Those results together with EMSA and other techniques suggest that FurA binds PfurA using a sequential mechanism: (i) a monomer specifically binds to an “iron box” and bends PfurA; (ii) two situations may occur, that a second FurA monomer covers the free “iron box" or that joins to the previously used forming a dimer which would maintain the DNA kinked; (iii) trimerization in which the DNA is unbent; and (iv) finally undergoes a tetramerization; the next coming molecules cover the DNA strands unspecifically. In summary, the bending appears when an “iron box” is bound to one or two molecules and decreases when both “iron boxes” are covered. These results suggest that DNA bending contributes at the first steps of FurA repression promoting the recruitment of new molecules resulting in a fine regulation in the Fur-dependent cluster associated genes.  相似文献   

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