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1.
In response to nitrate availability, Escherichia coli regulates the synthesis of a number of enzymes involved in anaerobic respiration and fermentation. When nitrate is present, nitrate reductase (narGHJI) gene expression is induced, while expression of the DMSO/TMAO reductase (dmsABC), fumarate reductase (frdABCD) and fermentation related genes are repressed. The narL and narX gene products are required for this nitrate-dependent control, and apparently function as members of a two-component regulatory system. NarX is a presumed sensor-transmitter for nitrate and possibly molybdenum detection. The presumed response-regulator, NarL, when activated by NarX then binds at the regulatory DNA sites of genes to modulate their expression. In this study a third nitrate regulatory gene, narQ, was identified that also participates in nitrate-dependent gene regulation. Strains defective in either narQ or narX alone exhibited no nitrate-dependent phenotype whereas mutants defective in both narQ and narX were fully inactive for nitrate-dependent repression or activation. In all conditions tested, this regulation required a functional narL gene product. These findings suggest that the narX and narQ products have complementary sensor-transmitter functions for nitrate detection, and can work independently to activate NarL, for eliciting nitrate-dependent regulation of anaerobic electron transport and fermentation functions. The narQ gene was cloned, sequenced, and compared with the narX gene. Both gene products are similar in size, hydrophobicity, and sequence, and contain a highly conserved histidine residue common to sensor-transmitter proteins.  相似文献   

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The products of four Escherichia coli genes (narX, narL, narQ, and narP) regulate anaerobic respiratory gene expression in response to nitrate and nitrite. We used lacZ gene and operon fusions to monitor the expression of these nar regulatory genes in response to different growth conditions. Maximal expression of the narXL operon required molybdate, nitrate, and integration host factor. Expression of the narP and narQ genes was weakly repressed by nitrate. The NarL and NarP proteins were required for full nitrate induction of narXL operon expression, whereas the nitrate repression of narP and narQ expression was mediated solely by the NarL protein. narXL operon expression was unaffected by anaerobiosis, whereas expression of narP and narQ was induced approximately fourfold. The Fnr and ArcA proteins were not required for this anaerobic induction.  相似文献   

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Previous studies have shown that narL+ is required for nitrate induction of nitrate reductase synthesis and for nitrate inhibition of fumarate reductase synthesis in Escherichia coli. We cloned narL on a 5.1-kilobase HindIII fragment. Our clone also contained a previously unidentified gene, which we propose to designate as narX, as well as a portion of narK. Maxicell experiments indicated that narL and narX encode proteins with approximate MrS of 28,000 and 66,000, respectively. narX insertion mutations reduced nitrate reductase structural gene expression by less than twofold. Expression of phi (narL-lacZ) operon fusions was weakly induced by nitrate but was indifferent to aerobiosis and independent of fnr. Expression of phi (narX-lacZ) operon fusions was induced by nitrate and was decreased by narL and fnr mutations. A phi (narK-lacZ) operon fusion was induced by nitrate, and its expression was fully dependent on narL+ and fnr+. Analysis of these operon fusions indicated that narL and narX are transcribed counterclockwise with respect to the E. coli genetic map and that narK is transcribed clockwise.  相似文献   

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In Escherichia coli, aerobiosis inhibits the synthesis of enzymes for anaerobic respiration (e.g., nitrate reductase and fumarate reductase) and for fermentation (e.g., formate-hydrogen lyase). Anaerobically, nitrate induces nitrate reductase synthesis and inhibits the formation of both fumarate reductase and formate-hydrogen lyase. Previous work has shown that narL+ is required for the effects of nitrate on synthesis of both nitrate reductase and fumarate reductase. Another gene, narK (whose function is unknown), has no observable effect on formation of these enzymes. We report here our studies on the role of nar genes in fumarate reductase and formate-hydrogen lyase gene expression. We observed that insertions in narX (also of unknown function) significantly relieved nitrate inhibition of fumarate reductase gene expression. This phenotype was distinct from that of narL insertions, which abolished this nitrate effect under certain growth conditions. In contrast, insertion mutations in narK and narGHJI (the structural genes for the nitrate reductase enzyme complex) significantly relieved nitrate inhibition of formate-hydrogen lyase gene expression. Insertions in narL had a lesser effect, and insertions in narX had no effect. We conclude that nitrate affects formate-hydrogen lyase synthesis by a pathway distinct from that for nitrate reductase and fumarate reductase.  相似文献   

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Analysis of the DNA sequence upstream of the narQ gene, which encodes the second nitrate-responsive sensor-transmitter protein in Escherichia coli, revealed an open reading frame (ORF) whose product shows a high degree of similarity to a number of iron-sulfur proteins as well as to the beta subunit of glutamate synthase (gltD) of E. coli. This ORF, located at 53.0 min on the E. coli chromosome, is divergently transcribed and is separated by 206 bp from the narQ gene. Because of the small size of the intergenic region, we reasoned that the genes may be of related function and/or regulated in a similar fashion. An aegA-lacZ gene fusion was constructed and examined in vivo; aegA expression was induced 11-fold by anaerobiosis and repressed 5-fold by nitrate. This control was mediated by the fnr, narX, narQ, and narL gene products. Analysis of an aegA mutant indicated that the aegA gene product is not essential for cell respiration or fermentation or for the utilization of ammonium or the amino acids L-alanine, L-arginine, L-glutamic acid, glycine, and DL-serine as sole nitrogen sources. The ORF was designated aegA to reflect that it is an anaerobically expressed gene. The structural properties of the predicted AegA amino acid sequence and the regulation of aegA are discussed with regard to the possible function of aegA in E. coli.  相似文献   

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Escherichia coli can respire anaerobically by reducing nitrate, trimethylamine-N-oxide, dimethyl sulfoxide, or fumarate. When nitrate is present, expression of the genes for fumarate (frdABCD), trimethylamine-N-oxide, and dimethyl sulfoxide (dmsABC) is repressed while expression of the nitrate reductase (narGHJI) gene is induced. This regulation requires molybdate and is mediated by the narX and narL gene products, which together form a two-component regulatory system. We provide evidence that NarX is a nitrate and molybdenum sensor which activates NarL when nitrate is available to cells. Mutants generated by hydroxylamine mutagenesis were repressed for frdA-lacZ expression even when cells were grown in the absence of nitrate. The mutations responsible for three of these nitrate independence (NarX*) phenotypes were localized to narX and further characterized in vivo for their ability to repress frdA-lacZ expression. Two of the mutants (the narX64 and narX71 mutants) had a greatly reduced requirement for molybdenum to function but still responded to nitrate. In contrast, a third mutant (the narX32 mutant) required molybdenum but did not exhibit full repression of frdA-lacZ expression even when nitrate was present. These narX* alleles also caused the induction of nitrate reductase gene expression and the repression of a dmsA-lacZ fusion in the absence of nitrate. Each narX* mutation was determined to lie in an 11-amino-acid region of the NarX polypeptide that follows a proposed transmembrane domain. We suggest that the conformation of the narX* gene products is altered such that even in the absence of nitrate each of these gene products more closely resembles the wild-type NarX protein when nitrate is present. These data establish a clear role for the narX gene product in gene regulation and strongly suggest its role in sensing nitrate and molybdenum.  相似文献   

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Previous studies have shown that narL+ is required for nitrate regulation of anaerobic respiratory enzyme synthesis, including formate dehydrogenase-N, nitrate reductase, and fumarate reductase. Insertions in the closely linked narX gene decrease, but do not abolish, nitrate regulation of anaerobic enzyme synthesis. Analysis of sequence similarities suggests that NarX and NarL comprise a two-component regulatory pair. We constructed lacZ operon and gene fusions to investigate the operon structure of narXL. We found evidence for a complex operon with at least two promoters; PXL-narX-PL-narL. We also investigated the role of NarX in nitrate regulation of anaerobic respiratory enzyme synthesis by constructing nonpolar loss of function narX alleles. These deletions were studied on narL+ lambda specialized transducing bacteriophage. The narX deletions had no effect on nitrate regulation in delta (narXL) strains. This finding suggest that the subtle effects of previously studied narX insertions are due to decreased expression of narL and that narX+ is not essential for normal nitrate regulation. The role of NarX in nitrate regulation remains to be determined.  相似文献   

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narK mutants of Escherichia coli produce wild-type levels of nitrate reductase but, unlike the wild-type strain, do not accumulate nitrite when grown anaerobically on a glucose-nitrate medium. Comparison of the rates of nitrate and nitrite metabolism in cultures growing anaerobically on glucose-nitrate medium revealed that a narK mutant reduced nitrate at a rate only slightly slower than that in the NarK+ parental strain. Although the specific activities of nitrate reductase and nitrite reductase were similar in the two strains, the parental strain accumulated nitrite in the medium in almost stoichiometric amounts before it was further reduced, while the narK mutant did not accumulate nitrite in the medium but apparently reduced it as rapidly as it was formed. Under conditions in which nitrite reductase was not produced, the narK mutant excreted the nitrite formed from nitrate into the medium; however, the rate of reduction of nitrate to nitrite was significantly slower than that of the parental strain or that which occurred when nitrite reductase was present. These results demonstrate that E. coli is capable of taking up nitrate and excreting nitrite in the absence of a functional NarK protein; however, in growing cells, a functional NarK promotes a more rapid rate of anaerobic nitrate reduction and the continuous excretion of the nitrite formed. Based on the kinetics of nitrate reduction and of nitrite reduction and excretion in growing cultures and in washed cell suspensions, it is proposed that the narK gene encodes a nitrate/nitrite antiporter which facilitates anaerobic nitrate respiration by coupling the excretion of nitrite to nitrate uptake. The failure of nitrate to suppress the reduction of trimethylamine N-oxide in narK mutants was not due to a change in the level of trimethylamine N-oxide reductase but apparently resulted from a relative decrease in the rate of anaerobic nitrate reduction caused by the loss of the antiporter system.  相似文献   

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