Abstract
The NIFA protein activates transcription of nitrogen fixation (nif) operons by the σ54-holoenzyme form of RNA polymerase. We purified active NIFA from Klebsiella pneumoniae in the form of a maltose-binding protein (MBP)-NIFA fusion; proteolytic release of MBP yielded inactive and insoluble NIFA. MBP-NIFA activated transcription from the nifHDK promoter in a purified transcription system. Like the related transcriptional activator NTRC, MBP-NIFA catalyzed the ATP-dependent isomerization of closed complexes between σ54-holoenzyme and a promoter to open complexes. MBP-NIFA had a broader nucleotide specificity than NTRC, being able to utilize pyrimidine in addition to purine nucleoside triphosphates. Both MBP-NIFA and a purified C-terminal fragment of NIFA bound to the upstream activation sequence for the nifHDK promoter, as assessed by DNase I footprinting. When assays were performed at 37°C instead of the usual 30°C, transcriptional activation, open complex formation, and DNA binding by MBP-NIFA were all abolished, consistent with the known heat lability of NIFA. However, the purified C-terminal fragment of NIFA still bound the upstream activation sequence at 37°C, indicating that the function of the helix-turn-helix DNA-binding motif is not inherently heat-labile.
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Lee, H. S., Berger, D. K., & Kustu, S. (1993). Activity of purified NIFA, a transcriptional activator of nitrogen fixation genes. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 90(6), 2266–2270. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.90.6.2266
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