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A decreased intracellular concentration of cAMP is insufficient to account for catabolite repression in Escherichia coli. We show that glucose lowers the amount of cAMP receptor protein (CRP) in cells. A correlation exists between CRP and β-galactosidase levels in cells growing under various conditions. Exogenous cAMP completely eliminates catabolite repression in CRP-overproducing cells, while it does not fully reverse the effect of glucose on β-galactosidase expression in wild-type cells. When the CRP concentration is reduced by manipulating the crp gene, β-galactosidase expression decreases in proportion to the concentration of CRP. These findings indicate that the lowered concentration of CRP caused by glucose is one of the major factors for catabolite repression. We propose that glucose causes catabolite repression by lowering the intracellular levels of both CRP and cAMP.  相似文献   

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Abstract Several anaerobically regulated gene fusions were examined for the effects of catabolite repression. Glucose repressed the expression of most of the genes represented in our collection of anaerobically induced fusions. However, addition of cyclic AMP did not reverse the effects of glucose. Furthermore, introduction of cya and crp mutations into selected anaerobically induced fusion strains did not reduce anaerobic gene expression as expected from the known mechanism of aerobic catabolite repression. In fact, in different fusion strains, cya or crp mutations caused from 2 to 20-fold increases in gene expression. Although glucose repression occurs anaerobically its mechanism would appear to be quite different from that under aerobic conditions.  相似文献   

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In Gram-positive bacteria, catabolite control protein A (CcpA)-mediated catabolite repression or activation regulates not only the expression of a great number of catabolic operons, but also the synthesis of enzymes of central metabolic pathways. We found that a constituent of the Bacillus subtilis respiratory chain, the small cytochrome c550 encoded by the cccA gene, was also submitted to catabolite repression. Similar to most catabolite-repressed genes and operons, the Bacillus subtilis cccA gene contains a potential catabolite response element cre, an operator site recognized by CcpA. The presumed cre overlaps the -35 region of the cccA promoter. Strains carrying a cccA'-IacZ fusion formed blue colonies when grown on rich solid medium, whereas white colonies were obtained when glucose was present. beta-Galactosidase assays with cells grown in rich medium confirmed the repressive effect of glucose on cccA'-lacZ expression. Introduction of a ccpA or hprK mutation or of a mutation affecting the presumed cccA cre relieved the repressive effect of glucose during late log phase. An additional glucose repression mechanism was activated during stationary phase, which was not relieved by the ccpA, hprK or cre mutations. An interaction of the repressor/corepressor complex (CcpA/seryl-phosphorylated HPr (P-Ser-HPr)) with the cccA cre could be demonstrated by gel shift experiments. By contrast, a DNA fragment carrying mutations in the presumed cccA cre was barely shifted by the CcpA/P-Ser-HPr complex. In footprinting experiments, the region corresponding to the presumed cccA cre was specifically protected in the presence of the CcpA/P-Ser-HPr complex.  相似文献   

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The maltose regulon consists of three operons controlled by a positive regulatory gene, malT. Deletions of the gene crp were introduced into strains which carried a malT-lacZ hybrid gene. From the observed reduction in beta-galactosidase activity it was concluded that the expression of malT-lacZ, and therefore of malT, is controlled by the catabolite activator protein (CAP), the product of the gene crp. Mutations were obtained which allowed a malT-lacZ hybrid gene to be expressed at a high level even in the absence of CAP. These mutations were shown to be located in or close to the promoter of the malT gene and were called malTp. The malTp mutations were transferred in the cis position to a wild-type malT gene. In the resulting strains, the expression of two of the maltose operons, malEFG and malK-lamB, still required the action of CAP, whereas that of the third operon, malPQ, was CAP independent. Therefore, in wild-type cells, CAP appears to control malPQ expression mainly, if not solely, by regulating the concentration of MalT protein in the cell. On the other hand, it controls the other two operons more stringently, both by regulating malT expression and by a more direct action, probably exerted in the promoters of these operons.  相似文献   

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Interaction of negative (CytR) and positive (cAMP-CRP) control in the promoter region of the uridine phosphorylase (udp) gene of Escherichia coli has been studied by using udp-lac operon fusions in which the structural lacZ gene is expressed from the wild type promoter udpP+ or from mutant promoters udpP1 and udpP18. The specific activity of beta-galactosidase was examined in these fusions in cytR+ and cytR- backgrounds after introduction of specific mutations in crp locus, crp* and crp(a) altering interaction of CRP protein with catabolite-sensitive promoters. The data obtained using crp* mutation confirm the proposed model of the udp gene regulation, according to which CytR repressor protein interferes with CRP binding site in the promoter-operator region of the udp gene and thereby prevents the positive action of cAMP-CRP complex on the udp expression. Additional data in favor of this model were obtained using crp(a) mutation which most probably alters the structure of CRP protein in such a way that it exhibits more high affinity to the udp promoter, as compared to the CytR repressor protein. Indeed, taken by itself, the crp(a) mutation did not lead to any increase in the expression of udpP+-lac fusion under the conditions of cAMP limitation (on glucose-grown cells), in spite of whether or not the CytR repressor was present. However, when combined with the ptsG mutation or when cells were grown on succinate medium, complete constitutive expression of udpP+-lac fusion is observed, even in the presence of the cytR gene product. The effect of the crp(a) mutation was virtually the same in strains harboring udpP1-lac fusion. These data are in accordance with suggestion that udpP1 is a mutation in the site of the promoter-operator region that responds to the cytR gene product, while the corresponding binding site for CRP protein is still unaltered in this mutant. On the other hand, the crp(a) mutation causes only slight alteration in the expression of udpP18-lac fusion, providing additional evidence that udpP18 mutation seems to comprise a modification of the promoter-operator region, where binding sites for CRP and CytR proteins overlap.  相似文献   

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Summary We have constructed and tested three lac diploid strains in an attempt to show whether operator-constitutive mutations relieve catabolite repression of the lac operon. Each of these carries a different operator mutation on the chromosome, and all three have the genotype I+P+OcZ+Y-polar/Flac I+P+O+ZdelY+A+. When these strains were grown in medium containing glucose plus gluconate, synthesis of -galactosidase (directed by a gene cis to a mutant operator) and of thiogalactoside transacetylase (directed by a gene cis to an intact operator) suffered equal catabolite repression. We conclude that the operator-constitutive mutations have no effect on catabolite repression. Since it has been shown in analogous experiments that all promoter mutations tested do alleviate catabolite repression, these results are consistent with the view that the operator and promoter are functionally distinct.  相似文献   

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The normal hut (histidine utilization) operons, as well as those with mutations affecting the regulation of their expression, of Salmonella typhimurium were introduced on an F' episome into cells of S. typhimurium and Klebsiella aerogenes whose chromosomal hut genes had been deleted and into cells of Escherichia coli, whose chromosome does not carry hut genes. The episomal hut operons respond in a manner very similar to induction and catabolite repression in all three organisms. The small differences found reflect both different abilities to take up inducers from the medium and different degrees of catabolite repression exerted by glucose.  相似文献   

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Abstract The expression of β-galactosidase by the lac transposon Tn 951 , in Escherichia coli , was found to be cAMP-dependent. This finding provided the basis for an investigation of the effect of cAMP on Tn 951 lac expression in Rhizobium , with the ultimate aim of using the Tn 951 system as a specific probe for cAMP mediated catabolite repression. When introduced into Rhizobium , Tn 951 directed the synthesis of β-galactosidase, which was inducible by isopropyl-β- d -thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG). Marked quantitative and qualitative differences in β-galactosidase expression were found between R. meliloti and R. japonicum during the growth cycle, with expression being higher in the former. β-Galactosidase levels were, however, unaffected by exogenous cAMP under catabolite repressing conditions.  相似文献   

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