Affiliation:
1. Department of Biotechnology, Faculty of Science, Mahidol University, Bangkok 10400, Thailand
2. Laboratory of Biotechnology, Chulabhorn Research Institute, Lak Si, Bangkok 10210, Thailand
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The genes involved in organic hydroperoxide protection in
Agrobacterium tumefaciens
were functionally evaluated. Gene inactivation studies and functional analyses have identified
ohr
, encoding a thiol peroxidase, as the gene primarily responsible for organic hydroperoxide protection in
A. tumefaciens
. An
ohr
mutant was sensitive to organic hydroperoxide killing and had a reduced capacity to metabolize organic hydroperoxides.
ohr
is located next to, and is divergently transcribed from,
ohrR
, encoding a sensor and transcription regulator of organic hydroperoxide stress. Transcription of both
ohr
and
ohrR
was induced by exposure to organic hydroperoxides but not by exposure to other oxidants. This induction required functional
ohrR
. The results of gel mobility shift and DNase I footprinting assays with purified OhrR, combined with in vivo promoter deletion analyses, confirmed that OhrR regulated both
ohrR
and
ohr
by binding to a single OhrR binding box that overlapped the
ohrR
and
ohr
promoters.
ohrR
and
ohr
are both required for the establishment of a novel cumene hydroperoxide-induced adaptive response. Inactivation or overexpression of other Prx family genes (
prx1
,
prx2
,
prx3
,
bcp1
, and
bcp2
) did not affect either the resistance to, or the ability to degrade, organic hydroperoxide. Taken together, the results of biochemical, gene regulation and physiological studies support the role of
ohrR
and
ohr
as the primary system in sensing and protecting
A. tumefaciens
from organic hydroperoxide stress.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
64 articles.
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