Affiliation:
1. Section of Microbiology, Wing Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-8101
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Zinc is an essential nutrient for all cells, but remarkably little is known regarding bacterial zinc transport and its regulation. We have identified three of the key components acting to maintain zinc homeostasis in
Bacillus subtilis
. Zur is a metalloregulatory protein related to the ferric uptake repressor (Fur) family of regulators and is required for the zinc-specific repression of two operons implicated in zinc uptake,
yciC
and
ycdHIyceA
. A
zur
mutant overexpresses the 45-kDa YciC membrane protein, and purified Zur binds specifically, and in a zinc-responsive manner, to an operator site overlapping the
yciC
control region. A similar operator precedes the
ycdH
-containing operon, which encodes an ABC transporter. Two lines of evidence suggest that the
ycdH
operon encodes a high-affinity zinc transporter whereas YciC may function as part of a lower-affinity pathway. First, a
ycdH
mutant is impaired in growth in low-zinc medium, and this growth defect is exacerbated by the additional presence of a
yciC
mutation. Second, mutation of
ycdH
, but not
yciC
, alters the regulation of both the
yciC
and
ycdH
operons such that much higher levels of exogenous zinc are required for repression. We conclude that Zur is a Fur-like repressor that controls the expression of two zinc homeostasis operons in response to zinc. Thus, Fur-like regulators control zinc homeostasis in addition to their previously characterized roles in regulating iron homeostasis, acid tolerance responses, and oxidative stress functions.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
235 articles.
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