首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
2.
Dong Y  Huang X  Wu XY  Zhao J 《Journal of bacteriology》2000,182(6):1575-1579
HetR is a serine-type protease required for heterocyst differentiation in heterocystous cyanobacteria under conditions of nitrogen deprivation. We have identified the active Ser residue of HetR from Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120 by site-specific mutagenesis. By changing the S152 residue to an Ala residue, the mutant protein cannot be labeled by Dansyl fluoride, a specific serine-type protein inhibitor. The mutant protein showed no autodegradation in vitro. The mutant hetR gene was introduced into Anabaena strain 884a, a hetR mutant. The resultant strain, Anabaena strain S152A, could not form heterocysts under conditions of nitrogen deprivation even though the up-regulation of the mutant hetR gene was induced upon removal of combined nitrogen. The Anabaena strain 216, which carries a mutant hetR gene encoding S179N HetR and could not form heterocysts, also produced HetR protein upon induction. Sequence comparison shows that Ser152 is conserved in all cyanobacterial HetR. Immunoblotting was used to study HetR induction in both the wild-type and mutant strains. The amount of mutant HetR in strain S152A and in strain 216 increased continuously for 24 h after nitrogen step-down, while the amount of HetR in wild-type cells reached a maximum level within 6 h after nitrogen step-down. Our results show the Ser152 is the active site of HetR. The protease activity is required for heterocyst differentiation and might be needed for repression of HetR overproduction under conditions of nitrogen deprivation.  相似文献   

3.
4.
5.
6.
A heterocyst is a terminally differentiated cell of cyanobacteria which is specialized in dinitrogen fixation. Heterocyst differentiation in Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120 is triggered by deprivation of combined nitrogen in the medium. Although various genes that are upregulated during heterocyst differentiation have been reported, most studies to date were limited to individual or a small number of genes. We prepared microarrays in collaboration with other members of the Anabaena Genome Project. Here we report on the genome-wide expression analysis of the responses to nitrogen deprivation in Anabaena. Many unidentified genes, as well as previously known genes, were found to be upregulated by nitrogen deprivation at various time points. Three main profiles of gene expression were found: genes expressed transiently at an early stage (1-3 hr) of nitrogen deprivation, genes expressed transiently at a later stage (8 hr), and genes expressed when heterocysts are formed (24 hr). We also noted that many of the upregulated genes were physically clustered to form 'expressed islands' on the chromosome. Namely, large, continuous genomic regions containing many genes were upregulated in a coordinated manner. This suggests a mechanism of global regulation of gene expression that involves chromosomal structure, which is reminiscent of eukaryotic chromatin remodelling. The possible implications of this global regulation are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Three new Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120 genes encoding group 2 alternative sigma factors have been cloned and characterized. Insertional inactivation of sigD, sigE, and sigF genes did not affect growth on nitrate under standard laboratory conditions but did transiently impair the abilities of sigD and sigE mutant strains to establish diazotrophic growth. A sigD sigE double mutant, though proficient in growth on nitrate and still able to differentiate into distinct proheterocysts, was unable to grow diazotrophically due to extensive fragmentation of filaments upon nitrogen deprivation. This double mutant could be complemented by wild-type copies of sigD or sigE, indicating some degree of functional redundancy that can partially mask phenotypes of single gene mutants. However, the sigE gene was required for lysogenic development of the temperate cyanophage A-4L. Several other combinations of double mutations, especially sigE sigF, caused a transient defect in establishing diazotrophic growth, manifested as a strong and prolonged bleaching response to nitrogen deprivation. We found no evidence for developmental regulation of the sigma factor genes. luxAB reporter fusions with sigD, sigE, and sigF all showed slightly reduced expression after induction of heterocyst development by nitrogen stepdown. Phylogenetic analysis of cyanobacterial group 2 sigma factor sequences revealed that they fall into several subgroups. Three morphologically and physiologically distant strains, Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120, Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7002, and Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 each contain representatives of four subgroups. Unlike unicellular strains, Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120 has three additional group 2 sigma factors that cluster in subgroup 2.5b, which is perhaps specific for filamentous or heterocystous cyanobacteria.  相似文献   

8.
9.
hetR is a central regulatory gene inducing and possibly maintaining irreversible heterocyst differentiation in filamentous cyanobacteria. A plasmid was constructed which enabled IPTG-mediated, controlled expression of hetR from a p tac promoter in Anabaena . When introduced into a heterocyst-deficient hetR mutant, induction led to massive formation of heterocysts in a medium free of combined nitrogen. In nitrate-containing cultures, induction elicited formation of only a few heterocysts, but led to nitrogen chlorosis in vegetative cells as evidenced from degradation of phycobiliproteins. Removal of the inducer IPTG caused chlorosis and death of the organisms in nitrate-free medium, but no reversal of heterocyst formation. This indicates that constant synthesis of HetR is not the (sole) reason for irreversibility of heterocyst formation.  相似文献   

10.
HetR, a serine type protease, plays an important role in heterocyst differentiation in filamentous cyanobacteria. We isolated and sequenced the hetR genes from different heterocystous and filamentous nonheterocystous cyanobacteria. The hetR gene in the heterocyst forming Anabaena variabilis ATCC 29413 FD was interrupted by interposon mutagenesis (mutant strain WSIII8). This mutant does not form heterocysts and shows no diazotrophic growth under aerobic conditions. However, under anaerobic N(2)-fixing conditions, the WSIII8 cells are able to grow, and high nitrogenase (Nif2) activity is detectable. Nif2 expression was demonstrated in each vegetative cell of the filament by immunolocalization 4 h after nitrogen step-down.  相似文献   

11.
The novel asr1734 gene of Anabaena (Nostoc) sp. strain PCC 7120 inhibited heterocyst development when present in extra copies. Overexpression of asr1734 inhibited heterocyst development in several strains including the wild type and two strains that form multiple contiguous heterocysts (Mch phenotype): a PatS null mutant and a hetR(R223W) mutant. Overexpression of asr1734 also caused increased nblA messenger RNA levels, and increased loss of autofluorescence in vegetative cells throughout filaments after nitrogen or sulphur depletion. Unlike the wild type, an asr1734 knockout mutant formed 5% heterocysts after a nitrogen shift from ammonium to nitrate, and formed 15% heterocysts and a weak Mch phenotype after step-down to medium lacking combined nitrogen. After nitrogen step-down, the asr1734 mutant had elevated levels of ntcA messenger RNA. A green fluorescent protein reporter driven by the asr1734 promoter, P(asr1734)-gfp, was expressed specifically in differentiating proheterocysts and heterocysts after nitrogen step-down. Strains overexpressing asr1734 and containing P(hetR)-gfp or P(patS)-gfp reporters failed to show normal patterned upregulation 24 h after nitrogen step-down even though hetR expression was upregulated at 6 h. Apparent orthologues of asr1734 are found only in two other filamentous nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria, Anabaena variabilis and Nostoc punctiforme.  相似文献   

12.
In many filamentous cyanobacteria, vegetative cells can differentiate into heterocysts, cells that are specialized for aerobic fixation of N(2). Synthesis of the heterocyst envelope polysaccharide is dependent on the gene hepA in Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120. In search of genes that are involved in the regulation of hepA, we transposon mutagenized strain DR1069, which bears a chromosomal hepA::luxAB fusion. One resulting mutant, designated HNL3, grows normally in medium with nitrate and shows poor induction of hepA in response to nitrogen deprivation. In HNL3, transposon Tn5-1058 is inserted within gene hcwA, a constitutively expressed open reading frame whose predicted product resembles N-acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine amidases. Reconstruction of the mutation confirmed that the mutant phenotype resulted from the insertion of the transposon. The induction of hepA in HNL3 is partially restored upon recombination of HNL3 with plasmid-borne, wild-type hcwA. Moreover, HcwA expressed in Escherichia coli exhibits wall-lytic activity. These results suggest that the degradation, or possibly reconstruction, of the cell peptidoglycan layer is a prerequisite for heterocyst maturation.  相似文献   

13.
Heterocyst-forming cyanobacteria grow as filaments of cells (trichomes) in which, under nitrogen limitation, two interdependent cell types, the vegetative cells performing oxygenic photosynthesis and the nitrogen-fixing heterocysts, exchange metabolites and regulatory compounds. SepJ is a protein conspicuously located at the cell poles in the intercellular septa of the filaments that has three well-defined domains: an N-terminal coiled-coil domain, a central linker and a C-terminal permease domain. Mutants of Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120 carrying SepJ proteins with specific deletions showed that, whereas the linker domain is dispensable, the coiled-coil domain is required for polar localization of SepJ, filament integrity, normal intercellular transfer of small fluorescent tracers and diazotrophy. An Anabaena strain carrying the SepJ protein from the filamentous, non-heterocyst-forming cyanobacterium Trichodesmium erythraeum, which lacks the linker domain, made long filaments in the presence of combined nitrogen but fragmented extensively under nitrogen deprivation and did not grow diazotrophically. In contrast, a chimera made of the Trichodesmium coiled-coil domain and the Anabaena permease allowed heterocyst differentiation and diazotrophic growth. Thus, SepJ provides filamentous cyanobacteria with a cell-cell anchoring function, but the permease domain has evolved in heterocyst formers to provide intercellular molecular exchange functions required for diazotrophy.  相似文献   

14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
PatS and products of nitrogen fixation control heterocyst pattern   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
  相似文献   

20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号