Affiliation:
1. Institut für Biologie der Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Berlin, Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The protein HoxA is the central regulator of the
Alcaligenes eutrophus
H16
hox
regulon, which encodes two hydrogenases, a nickel permease and several accessory proteins required for hydrogenase biosynthesis. Expression of the regulatory gene
hoxA
was analyzed. Screening of an 8-kb region upstream of
hoxA
with a promoter probe vector localized four promoter activities. One of these was found in the region immediately 5′ of
hoxA
; the others were correlated with the nickel metabolism genes
hypA1
,
hypB1
, and
hypX
. All four activities were independent of HoxA and of the minor transcription factor ς
54
. Translational fusions revealed that
hoxA
is expressed constitutively at low levels. In contrast to these findings, immunoblotting studies revealed a clear fluctuation in the HoxA pool in response to conditions which induce the
hox
regulon. Quantitative transcript assays indicated elevated levels of
hyp
mRNA under hydrogenase-derepressing conditions. Using interposon mutagenesis, we showed that the activity of a remote promoter is required for hydrogenase expression and autotrophic growth. Site-directed mutagenesis revealed that P
MBH
, which directs transcription of the structural genes of the membrane-bound hydrogenase, contributes to the expression of
hoxA
under hydrogenase-derepressing conditions. Thus, expression of the
hox
regulon is governed by a positive feedback loop mediating amplification of the regulator HoxA. These results imply the existence of an unusually large (ca. 17,000-nucleotide) transcript.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
30 articles.
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