Crystal structure of the quorum-sensing protein TraM and its interaction with the transcriptional regulator TraR

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Abstract

Transfer of the tumor-inducing plasmid in Agrobacterium tumefaciens is controlled by a quorum-sensing system whose main components are the transcriptional regulator TraR and its autoinducer. This system allows bacteria to synchronize infection of the host plant when a "quorum" of cells has been reached. TraM is an A. tumefaciens protein involved in the regulation of this system because it binds to TraR and prevents it from binding DNA. As a first step to understanding the molecular basis for the regulation of TraR by TraM, we have determined the crystal structure of TraM at 1.65 Å resolution. This protein is packed as a dimer, with each monomer consisting mainly of two antiparallel α helices. Monomers are tightly associated, with a large hydrophobic area buried upon dimerization. Secondly, we characterized the TraR-TraM complex in vitro. TraM (11.4 kDa, monomer molecular mass) binds tightly TraR (27 kDa, monomer molecular mass) forming a stable oligomeric complex that likely accounts for two TraR and two TraM dimers.

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Vannini, A., Volpari, C., & Di Marco, S. (2004). Crystal structure of the quorum-sensing protein TraM and its interaction with the transcriptional regulator TraR. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 279(23), 24291–24296. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M401855200

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