Affiliation:
1. Mikrobiologisches Institut, Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule, CH-8092 Zürich, Switzerland
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Many nitrogen fixation-associated genes in the soybean symbiont
Bradyrhizobium japonicum
are regulated by the transcriptional activator NifA, whose activity is inhibited by aerobiosis. NifA is encoded in the
fixR-nifA
operon, which is expressed at a low level under aerobic conditions and induced approximately fivefold under low-oxygen tension. This induction depends on a −24/−12-type promoter (
fixRp
1
) that is recognized by the ς
54
RNA polymerase and activated by NifA. Low-level aerobic expression and part of the anaerobic expression originates from a second promoter (
fixRp
2
) that overlaps with
fixRp
1
and depends on an upstream DNA region (UAS) located around position −68 (H. Barrios, H. M. Fischer, H. Hennecke, and E. Morett, J. Bacteriol. 177:1760–1765, 1995). A protein binding to the UAS was previously postulated to act as an activator. This protein has now been purified, and the corresponding gene (
regR
) has been cloned. On the basis of the predicted amino acid sequence, RegR belongs to the family of response regulators of two-component regulatory systems. We identified upstream of the
regR
gene an additional gene (
regS
) encoding a putative sensor kinase. A
regR
mutant was constructed in which neither a specific UAS-binding activity nor
fixRp
2
-dependent transcript formation and
fixR′-′lacZ
expression was detected in aerobically grown cells. Anaerobic
fixR′-′lacZ
expression was also decreased in
regR
mutants to about 10% of the level observed in the wild type. Similarly,
regR
mutants showed only about 2% residual nitrogen fixation activity, but unlike nodules induced by
nifA
mutants, the morphology of those nodules was normal, displaying no signs of necrosis. While
regR
mutants grew only slightly slower in free-living, aerobic conditions, they displayed a strong growth defect under anaerobic conditions. The phenotypic properties of
regS
mutants differed only marginally, if at all, from those of the wild type, suggesting the existence of a compensating sensor activity in these strains. The newly identified RegR protein may be regarded as a master regulator in the NifA-dependent network controlling
nif
and
fix
gene expression in
B. japonicum
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
90 articles.
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