Membrane insertion of the bacterial signal transduction protein ToxR and requirements of transcription activation studied by modular replacement of different protein substructures

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Abstract

The Vibrio cholerae protein ToxR is an integral membrane protein that acts as a transcription activator in response to environmental signals; it controls expression of toxin genes ctxA and ctxB, along with a variety of other genes related to pathogenicity, Here it is shown that: (i) ToxR has a modular architecture and that activation of transcription starting at the ctx promoter depends strictly on dimerization of the periplasmic ToxR domain; (ii) the transmembrane (TM) region of ToxR is sufficient as a topogenic signal but not for stable membrane anchoring of the protein; (iii) the TM region has no special function in signal transduction and (iv) a proline residue located within the TM region minimizes background transcription activation, most plausibly by reducing TM-TM interaction. Possible applications of ToxR as a technical tool for analysing protein-protein interactions between pairs of arbitrary TM domains are discussed.

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Kolmar, H., Hennecke, F., Götze, K., Janzer, B., Vogt, B., Mayer, F., & Fritz, H. J. (1995). Membrane insertion of the bacterial signal transduction protein ToxR and requirements of transcription activation studied by modular replacement of different protein substructures. EMBO Journal, 14(16), 3895–3904. https://doi.org/10.1002/j.1460-2075.1995.tb00061.x

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