Affiliation:
1. Department of Applied Biological Sciences, School of Agricultural Sciences, Nagoya University, Japan.
Abstract
Nitrite, either exogenously supplied or endogenously generated by nitrate reduction, activates transcription of the nitrate assimilation operon (nirA-nrtABCD-narB) in Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 cells treated with L-methionine-DL-sulfoximine (an inhibitor of glutamine synthetase), in which there is no negative feedback resulting from fixation of the ammonium generated by nitrite reduction (Kikuchi et al., J. Bacteriol. 178:5822-5825, 1996). Other transcription units related to nitrogen assimilation, i.e., the nirB-ntcB operon, glnA, and ntcA, were not activated by nitrite. Nitrite did not activate nirA operon transcription in a mutant with a deletion of ntcB, an ammonium-repressible gene encoding a LysR-type DNA-binding protein. Introduction of plasmid-borne ntcB into the ntcB deletion mutant restored the response of the cells to nitrite, indicating that NtcB activates the nirA operon in response to nitrite. Supplementation of nitrite or nitrate to nitrogen-starved cultures of the wild-type strain, but not of the ntcB deletion mutant, caused activation of the nirA operon without L-methionine-DL-sulfoximine treatment of the cells. The results suggested that the positive-regulation mechanism of nirA operon transcription plays a role in rapid adaptation of nitrogen-starved cells to changing availability of nitrate and nitrite.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
48 articles.
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