Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115.
Abstract
The ToxR protein of Vibrio cholerae is an integral membrane protein that coordinately regulates the expression of virulence genes required for successful infection. ToxR has been shown to bind directly to and activate transcription of the cholera toxin (ctx) promoter. Within the amino-terminal cytoplasmic region of ToxR, several amino acids are strictly conserved among ToxR, OmpR, and the other members of a family of bacterial regulatory proteins. To better understand the function of this region, two approaches were taken: conserved residues were changed by site-directed mutagenesis, and random mutations that eliminated ToxR-mediated transcriptional activation were isolated. Several classes of mutations were identified: those that abolish promoter DNA binding and transcriptional activation (toxR R96K, toxR R68K, and toxR R68L), those that abolish transcriptional activation but retain the ability to bind promoter DNA (toxR R96L), and those that have an intermediate phenotype (toxR R77L, toxR E51K, and toxR E51D). The toxR E51K allele had reduced activity in both Escherichia coli and V. cholerae but also exerted a dominant-negative effect over wild-type ToxR when assayed in V. cholerae. This result provides additional evidence that ToxR acts as an oligomer in the transcriptional activation process. From this mutational analysis of conserved amino acid residues within the OmpR-homologous region of ToxR, we conclude that this region is essential for transcriptional activation at the level of DNA binding and other steps that lead to activation of the ctx promoter.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
46 articles.
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