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In Bacillus subtilis, the activity of the nitrogen regulatory factor TnrA is regulated through a protein- protein interaction with glutamine synthetase. During growth with excess nitrogen, the feedback-inhibited form of glutamine synthetase binds to TnrA and blocks DNA binding by TnrA. Missense mutations in glutamine synthetase that constitutively express the TnrA-regulated amtB gene were characterized. Four mutant proteins were purified and shown to be defective in their ability to inhibit the in vitro DNA-binding activity of TnrA. Two of the mutant proteins exhibited enzymatic properties similar to those of wild-type glutamine synthetase. A model of B. subtilis glutamine synthetase was derived from a crystal structure of the Salmonella typhimurium enzyme. Using this model, all the mutated amino acid residues were found to be located close to the glutamate entrance of the active site. These results are consistent with the glutamine synthetase protein playing a direct role in regulating TnrA activity.  相似文献   

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We report the overexpression, purification, and properties of the regulatory protein, GlnR, for glutamine synthetase synthesis of Bacillus cereus. The protein was found to be a dimer with a molecular weight of approximately 30,000, and its subunit molecular weight was 15,000 in agreement with that (15,025) of deduced amino acid sequence of GlnR. The purified GlnR protein bound specifically to the promoter region of the glnRA operon of B. cereus and Bacillus subtilis. The binding of the GlnR protein to the DNA fragment was enhanced by the presence of glutamine synthetase, the product of glnA, of B. cereus or B. subtilis, although the affinity of the GlnR protein for DNA was not affected in the presence of glutamate, glutamine, Mg2+, Mn2+, or ammonia. These results indicate the existence of an interaction between GlnR and glutamine synthetase, and support the hypothesis that the regulation of glnA expression requires both GlnR protein and glutamine synthetase in Bacillus.  相似文献   

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Nitrogen metabolism genes of Bacillus subtilis are regulated by the availability of rapidly metabolizable nitrogen sources, but not by any mechanism analogous to the two-component Ntr regulatory system found in enteric bacteria. Instead, at least three regulatory proteins independently control the expression of gene products involved in nitrogen metabolism in response to nutrient availability. Genes expressed at high levels during nitrogen-limited growth are controlled by two related proteins, GlnR and TnrA, which bind to similar DNA sequences under different nutritional conditions. The TnrA protein is active only during nitrogen limitation, whereas GlnR-dependent repression occurs in cells growing with excess nitrogen. Although the nitrogen signal regulating the activity of the GlnR and TnrA proteins is not known, the wild-type glutamine synthetase protein is required for the transduction of this signal to the GlnR and TnrA proteins. Examination of GlnR- and TnrA-regulated gene expression suggests that these proteins allow the cell to adapt to growth during nitrogen-limited conditions. A third regulatory protein, CodY, controls the expression of several genes involved in nitrogen metabolism, competence and acetate metabolism in response to growth rate. The highest levels of CodY-dependent repression occur in cells growing rapidly in a medium rich in amino acids, and this regulation is relieved during the transition to nutrient-limited growth. While the synthesis of amino acid degradative enzymes in B. subtilis is substrate inducible, their expression is generally not regulated in response to nitrogen availability by GlnR and TnrA. This pattern of regulation may reflect the fact that the catabolism of amino acids produced by proteolysis during sporulation and germination provides the cell with substrates for energy production and macromolecular synthesis. As a result, expression of amino acid degradative enzymes may be regulated to ensure that high levels of these enzymes are present in sporulating cells and in dormant spores.  相似文献   

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Both the Rep68 and Rep78 proteins of adeno-associated virus type 2 (AAV) bind to AAV terminal repeat hairpin DNA and can mediate site-specific nicking in vitro at the terminal resolution site (trs) within the terminal repeats. To define the regions of the Rep proteins required for these functions, a series of truncated Rep78 derivatives was created. Wild-type and mutant proteins were synthesized by in vitro translation and analyzed for AAV hairpin DNA binding, trs endonuclease activity, and interaction on hairpin DNA. Amino-terminal deletion mutants which lacked the first 29 or 79 amino acid residues of Rep78 did not bind hairpin DNA, which is consistent with our previous identification of a DNA-binding domain in this region. Progressive truncation of the carboxyl-terminal region of Rep78 did not eliminate hairpin DNA binding until the deletion reached amino acid 443. The electrophoretic mobility of the Rep-specific protein-DNA complexes was inversely related to the molecular weight of the Rep derivative. Analysis of the C-terminal deletion mutants by the trs endonuclease assay identified a region (amino acids 467 to 476) that is essential for nicking but is not necessary for DNA binding. When endonuclease-positive, truncated Rep proteins that bound hairpin DNA were mixed with full-length Rep78 or Rep68 protein in electrophoretic mobility shift assays, a smear of protein-DNA complexes was observed. This smear migrated at an intermediate position with respect to the bands generated by the proteins individually. An antibody recognizing only the full-length protein produced a novel supershift band when included in a mixed binding assay containing Rep68 and a truncated Rep mutant. These experiments suggest that the Rep proteins can form hetero-oligomers on the AAV hairpin DNA.  相似文献   

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Tu J  Guo J  Zhang A  Zhang W  Zhao Z  Zhou H  Liu C  Chen H  Jin M 《PloS one》2011,6(10):e26175
The 2009 pandemic H1N1 influenza virus encodes an NS1 protein with 11 amino acids (aa) truncation at the C-terminus. The C-terminal tail of influenza virus NS1 protein constitutes a nucleolar localization signal (NoLS) and is the binding domain of the cellular pre-mRNA processing protein, poly(A)-binding protein II (PABII). Here, our studies showed that the C-terminal-truncated NS1 of the 2009 pandemic virus was inefficient at blocking host gene expression, extension of the truncated NS1 to its full length increased the inhibition of host gene expression. Mechanistically, this increased inhibition of host gene expression by the full-length NS1 was not associated with nucleolar localization, but was due to the restoration of NS1's binding capacity to PABII. Furthermore, in vitro and in vivo characterization of two recombinant viruses encoding either the C-terminal 11-aa truncated or full-length NS1 of the 2009 pandemic virus showed that the C-terminal 11-aa truncation in NS1 did not significantly alter virus replication, but increased virus pathogenicity in mice.  相似文献   

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