Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The AraC homolog ToxT coordinately regulates virulence gene expression in
Vibrio cholerae
. ToxT is required for transcriptional activation of the genes encoding cholera toxin and the toxin coregulated pilus, among others. In this work we focused on the interaction of ToxT with the
tcpA
promoter and investigated the mechanism of ToxT-dependent transcriptional activation at
tcpA.
Deletion analysis showed that a region from −95 to +2 was sufficient for ToxT binding and activation, both of which were simultaneously lost when the deletion was extended to −63. A collection of point mutations generated by error-prone PCR revealed two small regions required for ToxT-dependent transactivation. Binding studies performed with representative mutations showed that the two regions define sites at which ToxT binds to the
tcpA
promoter region, most likely as a dimer. Results obtained by using a
rpoA
truncation mutation showed that ToxT-dependent activation at
tcpA
involves the C-terminal domain of the RNA polymerase alpha subunit. A model of ToxT-dependent transcriptional activation at
tcpA
is proposed, in which ToxT interacts with two A-rich regions of
tcpA
centered at −72 and −51 and requires the alpha C-terminal domain of RNA polymerase.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
47 articles.
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