Affiliation:
1. Department of Biological Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755
2. Pfizer Co., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48105
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In many bacteria, the ferric uptake regulator (Fur) protein plays a central role in the regulation of iron uptake genes. Because iron figures prominently in the agriculturally important symbiosis between soybean and its nitrogen-fixing endosymbiont
Bradyrhizobium japonicum
, we wanted to assess the role of Fur in the interaction. We identified a
fur
mutant by selecting for manganese resistance. Manganese interacts with the Fur protein and represses iron uptake genes. In the presence of high levels of manganese, bacteria with a wild-type copy of the
fur
gene repress iron uptake systems and starve for iron, whereas
fur
mutants fail to repress iron uptake systems and survive. The
B. japonicum fur
mutant, as expected, fails to repress iron-regulated outer membrane proteins in the presence of iron. Unexpectedly, a wild-type copy of the
fur
gene cannot complement the
fur
mutant. Expression of the
fur
mutant allele in wild-type cells leads to a
fur
phenotype. Unlike a
B. japonicum fur
-null mutant, the strain carrying the dominant-negative
fur
mutation is unable to form functional, nitrogen-fixing nodules on soybean, mung bean, or cowpea, suggesting a role for a Fur-regulated protein or proteins in the symbiosis.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
14 articles.
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