Affiliation:
1. Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, Food and Drug Administration, Bethesda, Maryland 20892
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Bordetella pertussis
, the causative agent of whooping cough, produces a wide array of factors that are associated with its ability to cause disease. The expression and regulation of these virulence factors are dependent upon the
bvg
locus, which encodes three proteins: BvgA, a 23-kDa cytoplasmic protein; BvgS, a 135-kDa transmembrane protein; and BvgR, a 32-kDa protein. It is hypothesized that BvgS responds to environmental signals and interacts with BvgA, a transcriptional regulator, which upon modification by BvgS binds to specific promoters and activates transcription. An additional class of genes is repressed by the products of the
bvg
locus. The repression of these genes is dependent upon the third gene,
bvgR
. Expression of
bvgR
is dependent upon the function of BvgA and BvgS. This led to the hypothesis that the binding of phosphorylated BvgA to the
bvgR
promoter activates the expression of
bvgR
. We undertook an analysis of the transcriptional activation of
bvgR
expression. We identified the
bvgR
transcript by Northern blot analysis and identified the start site of transcription by primer extension. We determined that transcriptional activation of the
bvgR
promoter in an in vitro transcription system requires the addition of phosphorylated BvgA. Additionally, we have identified
cis
-acting regions that are required for BvgA activation of the
bvgR
promoter by in vitro footprinting and in vivo deletion and linker scanning analyses. A model of BvgA binding to the
bvgR
promoter is presented.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
29 articles.
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