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1.
The cAMP receptor protein (CRP) of Escherichia coli undergoes a conformational change in response to cAMP binding that allows it to bind specific DNA sequences. Using an in vivo screening method following the simultaneous randomization of the codons at positions 127 and 128 (two C-helix residues of the protein interacting with cAMP), we have isolated a series of novel constitutively active CRP variants. Sequence analysis showed that this group of variants commonly possesses leucine or methionine at position 127 with a beta-branched amino acid at position 128. One specific variant, T127L/S128I CRP, showed extremely high cAMP-independent DNA binding affinity comparable with that of cAMP-bound wild-type CRP. Further biochemical analysis of this variant and others revealed that Leu(127) and Ile(128) have different roles in stabilizing the active conformation of CRP in the absence of cAMP. Leu(127) contributes to an improved leucine zipper at the dimer interface, leading to an altered intersubunit interaction in the C-helix region. In contrast, Ile(128) stabilizes the proper position of the beta4/beta5 loop by functionally communicating with Leu(61). By analogy, the results suggest two direct local effects of cAMP binding in the course of activating wild-type CRP: (i) C-helix repositioning through direct interaction with Thr(127) and Ser(128) and (ii) the concomitant reorientation of the beta4/beta5 loop. Finally, we also report that elevated expression of T127L/S128I CRP markedly perturbed E. coli growth even in the absence of cAMP, which suggests why comparably active variants have not been described previously.  相似文献   

2.
C Pampeno  J S Krakow 《Biochemistry》1979,18(8):1519-1525
Reaction of the cAMP (cyclic adenosine 3'--5'-monophosphate) receptor protein (CRP) of Escherichia coli with the bifunctional reagent o-phenylenedimaleimide (oPDM) results in the cross-linking of the two subunits of a CRP protomer. In the presence of cAMP the rate of cross-linking increases. CRP modified with oPDM retains [3H]cAMP binding activity but loses [3H]d(I-C)n binding activity. Proteolysis of cross-linked CRP gives distinct sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic patterns depending upon whether cAMP was present during the reaction with oPDM. CRP cross-linked in the absence of cAMP retains the same relative resistance to proteolysis as unmodified CRP. The presence of 0.1 mM cAMP during proteolysis results in the production of two fragments, one of approximately 13 000 daltons and a second of approximately 20 000 daltons. CRP cross-linked with oPDM in the presence of cAMP (then dialyzed to remove cAMP) remains sensitive to alpha-chymotrypsin digestion even in the absence of added cAMP producing only the 13 000-dalton fragment. It is suggested that the nature of the oPDM cross-link is a consequence of the conformational state of CRP.  相似文献   

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S F Leu  C H Baker  E J Lee  J G Harman 《Biochemistry》1999,38(19):6222-6230
The lacP DNA binding and activation characteristics of CRP having amino acid substitutions at position 127 were investigated. Wild-type (WT) and T127C CRP footprinted lacP DNA in the presence of DNase I in a cAMP-dependent manner. The T127G, T127I, and T127S forms of CRP failed to footprint lacP both in the absence and in the presence of cAMP. Consistent with these data, WT and T127C CRP:cAMP complexes exhibited high affinity for the lacP CRP site whereas T127G, T127I, or T127S CRP:cAMP complexes exhibited low affinity for the lacP CRP site. CRP:cAMP:RNA polymerase (RNAP) complexes formed at lacP in reactions that contained WT, T127C, T127G, T127I, or T127S CRP. These results demonstrate that allosteric changes important for cAMP-mediated CRP activation are differentially affected by amino acid substitution at position 127. Proper cAMP-mediated reorientation of the DNA binding helices required either threonine or cysteine at position 127. However, cAMP-dependent interaction of CRP with RNAP was accomplished regardless of the amino acid at position 127. RNAP:lacP complexes that supported high-level lac RNA synthesis formed rapidly in reactions that contained WT or T127C CRP whereas RNAP:lacP complexes that supported only low-level lac RNA synthesis formed at slower rates in reactions that contained T127I or T127S CRP. The T127G CRP:cAMP:RNAP:lacP complex failed to activate lacP. The results of this study lead us to conclude that threonine 127 plays an important role in transduction of the signal from the CRP cyclic nucleotide binding pocket that promotes proper orientation of the DNA binding helices and only a minor, if any, role in the functional exposure of the CRP RNAP interaction domain.  相似文献   

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7.
The binding of the cyclic adenosine 3',5' monophosphate receptor protein (CRP or CAP) of Escherichia coli to non-specific DNA and to a specific lac recognition sequence has been investigated by circular dichroism (c.d.) spectroscopy. The effect of cAMP and cGMP on the co-operative non-specific binding was also studied. For the non-specific binding in the absence of cAMP a c.d. change (decrease of the intensity of the positive band with a shift of its maximum to longer wavelength) indicates that the DNA undergoes a conformational change upon CRP binding. This change might reflect the formation of the solenoidal coil previously observed by electron microscopy. The amplitude of the c.d. change increases linearly with the degree of saturation of the DNA and does not depend on the size of the clusters of CRP bound. From the variation of the c.d. effect as a function of the ionic strength, the product K omega (K, the intrinsic binding constant and omega, the co-operativity parameter) could be determined. The number of ion pairs involved in complex formation between CRP and DNA was found to be six to seven. Experiments performed with several DNAs, including the alternating polymers poly[d(A-T)] and poly[d(G-C)], demonstrated that the conformational change does not depend on the DNA sequence. However, in the presence of cAMP the c.d. spectrum of the DNA shows only a small variation upon binding CRP. In contrast, in the presence of cGMP the conformational change of the DNA is similar to that observed when non-liganded CRP binds. For the specific lac operon binding, the c.d. change is different from those observed for non-specific binding in the presence or absence of cAMP. These results emphasize the high variability of the DNA structure upon binding the same protein.  相似文献   

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9.
Is DNA unwound by the cyclic AMP receptor protein?   总被引:18,自引:12,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
Superhelical pBR 322 derivatives have been relaxed by eukaryotic topoisomerase I in the presence or in the absence of E. coli cyclic AMP receptor protein (CRP) and of cyclic AMP (cAMP). CRP alone, or cAMP alone do not affect the average linking number of the distribution of the relaxed topoisomers. Hence, they do not unwind the template. In the presence of cAMP, CRP induces a small unwinding. The extent of this unwinding is barely modified when the relaxation is carried out on a similar vector plasmid where the CRP binding site of the lac or of the gal operon has been inserted. Under these conditions, we checked that CRP occupies the lactose control site and that upon addition of RNA polymerase, the corresponding promoter is readily activated. These findings are difficult to reconcile with the proposal that activation of these promoters results from the binding of the CRP-cAMP complex to left-handed DNA sequences.  相似文献   

10.
In the absence of cAMP the cyclic AMP receptor protein (CRP) is relatively resistant to trypsin whereas the cAMP X CRP complex is attacked yielding N-terminal core fragments of 14,300 and 18,500 Da which still bind cAMP. The DNA X CRP complex formed at low ionic strength in the absence of cAMP is cleaved by trypsin with the formation of 9,700- and 6,000-Da fragments and the concomitant loss of cAMP binding activity. DNA X CRP remains as resistant to attack by subtilisin, clostripain, and the Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease as unliganded CRP but is slowly digested by chymotrypsin. All of the double-stranded polydeoxyribonucleotides and several of the single-stranded polydeoxyribonucleotides and polyribonucleotides tested render CRP sensitive to cleavage by trypsin. CRP is less rapidly cleaved by trypsin in the presence of d(A)n, d(I)n, and r(C)n indicative of a weaker affinity of CRP for these polynucleotides. The 9,700-Da fragment is N-terminal in CRP and probably terminates at Lys-89. The loss of cAMP binding activity following trypsin cleavage of DNA X CRP indicates that regions beyond this residue are important in the function of the cAMP-binding domain of CRP. The 6,000-Da fragment extends from Val-131 to Arg-185 or Lys-188 and contains part of the F helix involved in DNA binding by CRP.  相似文献   

11.
H Aiba  J S Krakow 《Biochemistry》1981,20(16):4774-4780
The cyclic AMP receptor protein (CRP) is a positive and negative regulatory protein for gene expression in Escherichia coli. The protein has been cleaved proteolytically to determine the relation between CRP structure and function. In the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate (NaDodSO4), chymotrypsin dissects CRP into two stable fragments of molecular weight 9500 (9.5K) and 13 000 (13K). After removal of NaDodSO4, the two fragments are resolved by Bio-Rex 70 chromatography in 6 M urea. Analyses of the terminal amino acids released from each fragment and cyanogen bromide cleavage products indicate that the 9.5K fragment is amino proximal in CRP while the 13K fragment is carboxyl proximal. Notable features of amino acid composition are the relatively high amount of arginine and methionine in the 13K fragment and the retention in the 9.5K fragment of the two tryptophans present in the CRP subunit. Following isoelectric focusing in 8 M urea, the 9.5K fragment, 22.5K CRP, and 13K fragment migrate to pH 5.5, 8.3, and 10.3, respectively. While CRP is a cAMP-stimulated DNA binding protein, the 13K fragment binds to DNA in the presence and absence of cAMP. The 9.5K fragment associates to form dimers and decamers. These data are consonant with a model in which the DNA binding domain is present in the carboxyl proximal region of CRP while the amino proximal region contains the subunit-subunit interaction sites and much of the cAMP binding domain.  相似文献   

12.
Fic E  Polit A  Wasylewski Z 《Biochemistry》2006,45(2):373-380
The cAMP receptor protein, allosterically activated by cAMP, regulates the expression of more than 100 genes in Escherichia coli. CRP is a homodimer of two-domain subunits. It has been suggested that binding of cAMP to CRP leads to a long-distance signal transduction from the N-terminal cAMP binding domain to the C-terminal domain of the protein responsible for interaction with specific sequences of DNA. In this study, the stopped-flow and time-resolved fluorescence lifetime measurements were used to observe the kinetics of the distance changes between the N-terminal and C-terminal domain of CRP induced by binding of cAMP to high-affinity binding sites. In these measurements, we used the constructed CRP heterodimer, which possesses a single Trp85 residue localized at the N-terminal domain of one CRP subunit, and fluorescently labeled by 1,5-I-AEDANS Cys178 localized at the C-terminal domain of the same subunit or at the opposite one. The F?rster resonance energy transfer method has been used to study the distance changes, induced by binding of cAMP, between Trp85 (fluorescence donor) and Cys178-AEDANS (fluorescence acceptor) in the CRP structure. The obtained results show that the allosteric transitions of CRP at micromolar cAMP concentrations follow the sequential binding model, in which binding of cAMP to high-affinity sites causes a 4 A movement of the C-terminal domain toward N-terminal domains of the protein, with kinetics faster than 2 ms, and CRP adopts the "closed" conformation. This fast process is followed by the slower reorientation of both CRP subunits.  相似文献   

13.
The non-specific DNA binding of CRP and its N-terminal core, alpha CRP, to a 298 base pair DNA fragment, in the presence and absence of cAMP, has been studied using the nitrocellulose filter binding technique and analysed quantitatively using the theory of Clore et al. [J. Mol. Biol. (1982) 155, 447-466]. It is shown that both CRP and alpha CRP bind cooperatively to DNA. At an ionic strength of 100 mM and pH 7.5, the intrinsic equilibrium association constant for the binding of alpha CRP to DNA is approximately 10-times smaller than that for CRP, but the cooperativity parameter is approximately 17-times larger for alpha CRP than CRP. cAMP exerts its effect solely on the intrinsic equilibrium constant and does not alter the cooperativity. In the case of alpha CRP, cAMP reduces the intrinsic equilibrium association constant by a factor of 3, in contrast to the case of CRP where cAMP increases it by a factor of 3. The possible location of the DNA binding site present in the N-terminal core of CRP is discussed in the light of crystallographic data on the cAMP . CRP complex [McKay et al. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 9518-9524].  相似文献   

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15.
The effects of varying amounts of cAMP receptor protein (CRP) in the presence and absence of cAMP on the melting and differential melting curves of a 301-bp fragment containing the lac control region in 5 mM Na+ have been investigated. The native 301-bp fragment consists of three cooperatively melting thermalites. At 5 mM Na+, thermalite I (155 bp) has a Tm of 66.4 degrees C and the melting transitions of thermalites II (81 bp) and III (65 bp) are superimposed with a Tm of 61.9 degrees C. The specific DNA target site for CRP and the lac promotor are located within thermalite II. CRP alone exerts no specific effects on the melting of the 301-bp fragment, non-specific DNA binding of CRP resulting in a progressive stabilization of the double-stranded DNA by increasing the number of base pairs melting at a higher Tm in a non-cooperative transition. The cAMP-CRP complex, however, exerts a specific effect with a region of approximately 36 bp, comprising the specific CRP binding site and a neighbouring region of DNA, being stabilized. The appearance of this new cooperatively melting region, known as thermalite IV, is associated with a corresponding decrease in the area of thermalites II/III. The Tm of thermalite IV is 64.4 degrees C, 2.5 degrees C higher than that of thermalites II/III. With two or more cAMP-CRP complexes bound per 301-bp fragment, the stabilization also affects the remaining 110 bp now making up thermalites II/III whose Tm is increased by 1 degrees C to 62.9 degrees C. The implications of these findings for various models of the mode of action of the cAMP-CRP complex are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
H Aiba  T Nakamura  H Mitani    H Mori 《The EMBO journal》1985,4(12):3329-3332
Mutations which permit cAMP binding protein (CRP) to act in the absence of cAMP have been isolated by in vitro mutagenesis of a plasmid containing the cloned crp gene. Adenylate cyclase deficient cells harbouring the mutant (crp*) plasmids exhibited a variety of fermentation profiles on MacConkey indicator plates containing various sugars. beta-galactosidase synthesis in cells carrying the crp* plasmids was activated most by the addition of cGMP as well as cAMP. The sites of mutations which are responsible for the cAMP independent phenotype were determined by in vitro recombination and DNA sequencing. The amino acid substitutions in the mutant proteins were found in two specific regions of the crp gene encoding residues 53-62 and 141-148 of CRP polypeptide. The first region may participate in cAMP binding, while the second appears to be the inter-domain region of the N-terminal cAMP-binding and C-terminal DNA-binding domains.  相似文献   

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G S Tan  P Kelly  J Kim  R M Wartell 《Biochemistry》1991,30(20):5076-5080
The secondary structures of the cAMP receptor protein (CRP), a complex of CRP and cAMP, and a cAMP-independent receptor protein mutant (CRP*141 gln) were examined by using Raman spectroscopy. Spectra were obtained from CRP and CRP*141 gln dissolved in 0.3 M NaCl and 30 mM sodium phosphate at protein concentrations of 30-40 mg/mL. CRP and CRP.cAMP1 were compared at lower protein concentrations (10-12 mg/mL) in a solvent of 0.35 M NaCl and 20 mM sodium phosphate. Raman analysis indicates that CRP structural changes induced by one bound cAMP or by the Gly to Gln mutation at residue 141 are small. Spectra of the three CRP samples are essentially identical from 400 to 1900 cm-1. This result differs from the Raman spectroscopy study of CRP and CRP.cAMP2 cocrystals [DeGrazia et al. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 3557]. The latter work showed spectral differences between CRP and CRP.cAMP2 consistent with alterations in the protein conformation. These studies indicate that CRP and CRP.cAMP1 in solution are similar in structure and differ from CRP.cAMP2 cocrystals. Protease digestion and a DNA binding assay were also employed to characterize the wild-type and mutant proteins. CRP*141 gln exhibited the same conformational characteristics of previously reported cAMP-independent mutant proteins. It was sensitive to proteolytic attack in the absence of cAMP, or upon addition of cGMP. In the absence of cAMP, both wild-type and mutant CRPs bound noncooperatively to a 62 bp lac promoter DNA. The equilibrium constants were approximately 10(6) M-1 in 0.1 M Na+. CRP*141 gln had a 2-4-fold higher affinity for the 62 bp DNA than CRP.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
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