Affiliation:
1. Present address: UMR CNRS 2472-INRA 1157, Virologie Moléculaire et Structurale, 1 Avenue de la Terrasse, 91198 Gif-sur-Yvette, France.
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Bacillus subtilis
168 is resistant to phenolic acids by expression of an inducible enzyme, the phenolic acid decarboxylase (PadC), that decarboxylates these acids into less toxic vinyl derivatives. In the phenolic acid stress response (PASR), the repressor of
padC
, PadR, is inactivated by these acids. Inactivation of PadR is followed by a strong expression of
padC
. To elucidate the functional interaction between PadR and the
padC
promoter, we performed (i) footprinting assays to identify the region protected by PadR, (ii) electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSAs) with a modified
padC
promoter protected region to determine the interacting sequences, and (iii) random mutagenesis of
padR
to identify amino acid residues essential for the function of PadR. We identified an important consensus dyad sequence called IR1-2 (ATGT-8N-ACAT) overlapping a second dyad element (GTGT-8N-ACAT) that we named dIR1-2bis. The entire dIR1-2bis/IR1-2 sequence permits binding of two PadR dimers in EMSAs, which may be observed for bacteria grown under noninduced conditions where the
padC
promoter is completely repressed. Three groups of modified PadRs giving a PASR phenotype were characterized
in vivo
. The DNA sequences of certain mutant
padR
alleles indicate that important residues are all located in the region containing the coiled-coil leucine zipper domain that is involved in dimerization. These substitutions reduce the affinity of PadR binding to the
padC
promoter. Of particular interest are residue L128, located at the center of the putative coiled-coil leucine zipper domain, and residue E97, which is conserved among all PadRs.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
39 articles.
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