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1.
Abstract A gene ( fur ) for a Fur-like protein was identified on a 1.1 kb chromosomal DNA fragment of Staphylococcus epidermidis BN 280; the fur gene is followed by an open reading frame coding for the N-terminus of a putative Superoxide dismutase. Within the − 35 promoter region of both genes, a sequence motif was detected with low similarity to Fur-binding regulatory DNA segments, the so-called Fur boxes. Fur titration in Escherichia coli strain H1717 demonstrated that the E. coli Fur protein binds to the Fur box of the promoter region of the S. epidermidis fur gene. The S. epidermidis Fur protein was expressed in E. coli as indicated by the formation of inactive dimers with the chimeric repressor CI(N)-Fur(C) (Stojiljkovic I. and Hantke. K. (1995) Mol. Gen. Genet. 247, 199–205), but was not able to complement the Fur mutation in E. coli H1681.  相似文献   

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In this study, we have characterized the in vitro binding of Neisseria gonorrhoeae Fur to several well-defined iron transport genes, as well as to additional genes involved in major catabolic, secretory, and recombination pathways of gonococci. The gonococcal Fur protein was recombinantly expressed in Escherichia coli HBMV119. Fur was isolated from inclusion bodies and partially purified by ion-exchange chromatography. Gonococcal Fur was found to bind to the promoter/operator region of a gene encoding the previously identified Fur-regulated periplasmic binding protein (FbpA) in a metal ion-dependent fashion, demonstrating that purified Fur is functional. In silico analysis of the partially completed gonococcal genome (FA1090) identified Fur boxes in the promoters of several genes, including tonB, fur, recN, secY, sodB, hemO, hmbR, fumC, a hypothetical gene (Fe-S homolog), and the opa family of genes. By using purified gonococcal Fur, we demonstrate binding to the operator regions of tonB, fur, recN, secY, sodB, hemO, hmbR, fumC, the Fe-S homolog gene, and the opa gene family as determined by an electrophoretic mobility shift assay. While gonococcal Fur was demonstrated to bind to the promoter regions of all 11 opa genes (opaA through -K), we did not detect binding of purified E. coli Fur with 8 of the 11 opa members, indicating that target DNA sequence specificities between these two closely related proteins exist. Furthermore, we observed differences in the relative strengths of binding of gonococcal Fur for these different genes, which most likely reflect a difference in affinity between gonococcal Fur and its DNA targets. This is the first report that definitively demonstrates the binding of gonococcal Fur to its own promoter/operator region, as well as to the opa family of genes that encode surface proteins. Our results demonstrate that the gonococcal Fur protein binds to the regulatory regions of a broad array of genes and indicates that the gonococcal Fur regulon is larger than originally proposed.  相似文献   

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Ma Z  Lee JW  Helmann JD 《Nucleic acids research》2011,39(12):5036-5044
Bacillus subtilis PerR is a Fur family repressor that senses hydrogen peroxide by metal-catalyzed oxidation. PerR contains a structural Zn(II) ion (Site 1) and a regulatory metal binding site (Site 2) that, upon association with either Mn(II) or Fe(II), allosterically activates DNA binding. In addition, a third less conserved metal binding site (Site 3) is present near the dimer interface in several crystal structures of homologous Fur family proteins. Here, we show that PerR proteins with substitutions of putative Site 3 residues (Y92A, E114A and H128A) are functional as repressors, but are unexpectedly compromised in their ability to sense H(2)O(2). Consistently, these mutants utilize Mn(II) but not Fe(II) as a co-repressor in vivo. Metal titrations failed to identify a third binding site in PerR, and inspection of the PerR structure suggests that these residues instead constitute a hydrogen binding network that modulates the architecture, and consequently the metal selectivity, of Site 2. PerR H128A binds DNA with high affinity, but has a significantly reduced affinity for Fe(II), and to a lesser extent for Mn(II). The ability of PerR H128A to bind Fe(II) in vivo and to thereby respond efficiently to H(2)O(2) was restored in a fur mutant strain with elevated cytosolic iron concentration.  相似文献   

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Thefur gene product, Fur, ofEscherichia coli is a repressor when it binds Fe(II). Since heme and iron metabolism are closely linked and Fur is rich in histidine, a ligand for heme, the binding of heme to Fur was investigated. The oxidized Fur-heme complex is stable and low spin with a Soret maximum at 404 nm and no 620-nm band. CO coordinates with the reduced heme-Fur complex, causing a shift from 412 nm to 410 nm, and stabilizes it, increasing the half-life from 5 to 15 min. Circular dichroism (CD) spectra in the Soret region show heme bound in an asymmetric environment in Fur, both in the oxidized and reduced-CO forms. Quenching of tyrosine fluorescence by heme revealed rapid, tight binding (K d<1μM) with an unusual stoichiometry of 1 heme:1 Fur dimer. Fur binds Mn(II), a model ligand for the endogenous Fe(II), much more weakly (K d>80μM). Far-ultraviolet CD spectroscopy showed that theα-helix content of apo-Fur decreases slightly with heme binding, but increases with Mn(II) binding. Competition experiments indicated that heme interacts with Fur dimers at the same site as Mn(II) and can displace the metal. In contrast to Mn(II), Zn(II) did not quench the tyrosine fluoroescence of Fur, affected the CD spectrum less than Mn(II), but did bind in a manner which prevented heme from binding. In sum, Fur not only binds heme and Zn(II) with sufficient affinity to be biologically relevant, but the interactions that occur between these ligands and their effects on Mn(II) binding need to be taken into account when addressing the biological function of Fur.  相似文献   

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Identification and cloning of a fur regulatory gene in Yersinia pestis.   总被引:22,自引:15,他引:22       下载免费PDF全文
Yersinia pestis is one of many microorganisms responding to environmental iron concentrations by regulating the synthesis of proteins and an iron transport system(s). In a number of bacteria, expression of iron uptake systems and other virulence determinants is controlled by the Fur regulatory protein. DNA hybridization analysis revealed that both pigmented and nonpigmented cells of Y. pestis possess a DNA locus homologous to the Escherichia coli fur gene. Introduction of a Fur-regulated beta-galactosidase reporter gene into Y. pestis KIM resulted in iron-responsive beta-galactosidase activity, indicating that Y. pestis KIM expresses a functional Fur regulatory protein. A cloned 1.9-kb ClaI fragment of Y. pestis chromosomal DNA hybridized specifically to the fur gene of E. coli. The coding region of the E. coli fur gene hybridized to a 1.1-kb region at one end of the cloned Y. pestis fragment. The failure of this clone to complement an E. coli fur mutant suggests that the 1.9-kb clone does not contain a functional promoter. Subcloning of this fragment into an inducible expression vector restored Fur regulation in an E. coli fur mutant. In addition, a larger 4.8-kb Y. pestis clone containing the putative promoter region complemented the Fur- phenotype. These results suggest that Y. pestis possesses a functional Fur regulatory protein capable of interacting with the E. coli Fur system. In Y. pestis Fur may regulate the expression of iron transport systems and other virulence factors in response to iron limitation in the environment. Possible candidates for Fur regulation in Y. pestis include genes involved in ferric iron transport as well as hemin, heme/hemopexin, heme/albumin, ferritin, hemoglobin, and hemoglobin/haptoglobin utilization.  相似文献   

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HfIB, also called FtsH, is an essential Escherichia coli protein involved in the proteolysis of the heat-shock regulator σ32 and of the phage regulator λcll. The hfIB1 (Ts) allele (formerly called ftsH1 ) conferring temperature-sensitive growth at 42°C is suppressed by loss of the ferric-uptake repressor Fur and by anaerobic growth. We show here that suppression requires TonB-dependent Fe(III) transport in the hfIB1 (Ts) fur mutant during aerobic growth at 42°C and Feo-dependent Fe(II) transport during anaerobic growth at 42°C. Temperature-resistant growth of hfIB1 (Ts) strains is also observed at 42°C in the presence of a high concentration of Fe(II), Ni(II), Mn(II) or Co(II) salts, but not in the presence of Zn(II), Cd(II), Cu(II), Mg(II), Ca(II) or Cr(III) salts. However, neither Ni(II) nor a fur mutation permits growth in the complete absence of HfIB. The heat-shock response, evaluated by an htpG :: lacZ fusion, is overinduced in hfIB1 (Ts) strains at 42°C because of stabilization of σ32. Growth in the presence of Ni(II) or in the absence of the Fur repressor abolishes this overinduction in the hfIB1 (Ts) strain, and, in the hfIB1 (Ts) fur mutant, σ32 is no longer stabilized at 42°C. These results reinforce the recent observation that HfIB is a metalloprotease active against σ32 in vitro and suggest that it can associate functionally in vivo with Fe(II), Ni(II), Mn(II) and Co(II) ions.  相似文献   

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The ferric uptake regulator, Fur, represses iron uptake and siderophore biosynthetic genes under iron-replete conditions. Here we report in vitro solution studies on Vibrio anguillarum Fur binding to the consensus 19-bp Escherichia coli iron box in the presence of several divalent metals. We found that V. anguillarum Fur binds the iron box in the presence of Mn(2+), Co(2+), Cd(2+), and to a lesser extent Ni(2+) but, unlike E. coli Fur, not in the presence of Zn(2+). We also found that V. anguillarum Fur contains a structural zinc ion that is necessary yet alone is insufficient for DNA binding.  相似文献   

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Thefur gene product, Fur, ofEscherichia coli is a repressor when it binds Fe(II). Since heme and iron metabolism are closely linked and Fur is rich in histidine, a ligand for heme, the binding of heme to Fur was investigated. The oxidized Fur-heme complex is stable and low spin with a Soret maximum at 404 nm and no 620-nm band. CO coordinates with the reduced heme-Fur complex, causing a shift from 412 nm to 410 nm, and stabilizes it, increasing the half-life from 5 to 15 min. Circular dichroism (CD) spectra in the Soret region show heme bound in an asymmetric environment in Fur, both in the oxidized and reduced-CO forms. Quenching of tyrosine fluorescence by heme revealed rapid, tight binding (K d<1M) with an unusual stoichiometry of 1 heme:1 Fur dimer. Fur binds Mn(II), a model ligand for the endogenous Fe(II), much more weakly (K d>80M). Far-ultraviolet CD spectroscopy showed that the-helix content of apo-Fur decreases slightly with heme binding, but increases with Mn(II) binding. Competition experiments indicated that heme interacts with Fur dimers at the same site as Mn(II) and can displace the metal. In contrast to Mn(II), Zn(II) did not quench the tyrosine fluoroescence of Fur, affected the CD spectrum less than Mn(II), but did bind in a manner which prevented heme from binding. In sum, Fur not only binds heme and Zn(II) with sufficient affinity to be biologically relevant, but the interactions that occur between these ligands and their effects on Mn(II) binding need to be taken into account when addressing the biological function of Fur.  相似文献   

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In Sinorhizobium meliloti, the Mur(Sm) protein, a homologue of the ferric uptake regulator (Fur), mediates manganese-dependent regulation of the MntABCD manganese uptake system. In this study, we analyzed Mur(Sm) binding to the promoter region of the S. meliloti mntA gene. We demonstrated that Mur(Sm) protein binds with high affinity to the promoter region of mntA gene in a manganese-responsive manner. Moreover, the results presented here indicate that two monomers, or one dimer, of Mur(Sm) binds the DNA. The binding region was identified by DNase I footprinting analysis and covers a region of about 30 bp long that contains a palindromic sequence. The Mur(Sm) binding site, present in the mntA promoter region, is similar to a Fur box; however, manganese-activated Mur(Sm) binds a canonical Fur box with very low affinity. Furthermore, the data obtained indicate that Mur(Sm) responds to physiological concentrations of manganese.  相似文献   

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