Multimerization of Phosphorylated and Non-phosphorylated ArcA Is Necessary for the Response Regulator Function of the Arc Two-component Signal Transduction System

77Citations
Citations of this article
41Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

To adapt to anaerobic conditions, Escherichia coli operates the Arc two-component signal transduction system, consisting of a sensor kinase, ArcB, and a response regulator, ArcA. ArcA is converted to the active form, phosphorylated ArcA (ArcA-P), by ArcB-mediated phosphorylation. The active ArcA-P binds to the promoter regions of target genes, thereby regulating their transcriptional activities. The phosphoryl group of ArcA-P is unstable with a half-life of 30 min. However, we were able to inhibit the dephosphorylation for more than 12 h by the addition of EDTA; this allowed us to characterize ArcA-P. Gel-filtration and glycerol sedimentation experiments demonstrated that ArcA exists as a homo-dimer. ArcA phosphorylated by either ArcB or carbamyl phosphate multimerizes to form a tetramer of dimers; this multimer binds to the ArcA DNA binding site. Isoelectric focusing gel electrophoresis and nitrocellulose-filter binding analyses indicated that the ArcA multimer is composed of both ArcA-P and ArcA in a ratio, 1:1. The ArcA(D54E) mutant protein was unable to be phosphorylated by ArcB. This defect resulted in the inability of ArcA(D54E) to form a multimer or to bind to the ArcA DNA binding site. These results indicate that phosphorylation of ArcA induces multimerization prior to DNA binding, and the multimerization is a prerequisite for binding. Our results suggest a novel model that phosphorylation of ArcA by ArcB regulates multimerization of ArcA, which in turn functions as a response regulator.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Jeon, Y., Lee, Y. S., Han, J. S., Kim, J. B., & Hwang, D. S. (2001). Multimerization of Phosphorylated and Non-phosphorylated ArcA Is Necessary for the Response Regulator Function of the Arc Two-component Signal Transduction System. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 276(44), 40873–40879. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M104855200

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free