Functional Dissection of the LysR-type CysB Transcriptional Regulator

  • Lochowska A
  • Iwanicka-Nowicka R
  • Plochocka D
  • et al.
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Abstract

CysB is a tetrameric LysR-type transcriptional regulator that acts as an activator ofcys regulon genes and as an autorepressor. Positive control of cys genes requires the presence of the inducer N-acetylserine. Following random and site-directed mutagenesis of the cysB gene, 20 CysB variants were isolated. Six single amino acid substitutions within the N terminus of CysB abolished the DNA-binding ability of the protein. Seven mutations in the central region of CysB affected its response to the inducer. Four of these CysB mutants retained repressing activity, but lost their activating function in vivo. Their DNA binding characteristics were consistent with an inability to respond to acetylserine by a qualitative change in the DNA-protein interaction. Three of the single residue substitutions resulted in constitutive activ- ity of CysB. The electrophoretic mobility of the complex formed by one of the CysBc variants with the cysP promoter suggested a dimeric state of this protein. Characteristics of six truncated CysB variants lacking 5–30 C-terminal residues indicated the involvement of the C terminus in the DNA binding, oligomerization, and stability of CysB. The single substitution Y27G resulted in the CysBpc variant, able to bind DNA and to respond to the inducer by a qualitative change in the DNA-protein complex, but defective in the positive control of the cysP promoter.

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Lochowska, A., Iwanicka-Nowicka, R., Plochocka, D., & Hryniewicz, M. M. (2001). Functional Dissection of the LysR-type CysB Transcriptional Regulator. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 276(3), 2098–2107. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.m007192200

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