Affiliation:
1. Department of Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin—Madison, Madison, Wisconsin
Abstract
ABSTRACT
GlnD is a bifunctional uridylyltransferase/uridylyl-removing enzyme and is thought to be the primary sensor of nitrogen status in the cell. It plays an important role in nitrogen assimilation and metabolism by reversibly regulating the modification of P
II
proteins, which in turn regulate a variety of other proteins. We report here the characterization of
glnD
mutants from the photosynthetic, nitrogen-fixing bacterium
Rhodospirillum rubrum
and the analysis of the roles of GlnD in the regulation of nitrogen fixation. Unlike
glnD
mutations in
Azotobacter vinelandii
and some other bacteria,
glnD
deletion mutations are not lethal in
R. rubrum
. Such mutants grew well in minimal medium with glutamate as the sole nitrogen source, although they grew slowly with ammonium as the sole nitrogen source (MN medium) and were unable to fix N
2
. The slow growth in MN medium is apparently due to low glutamine synthetase activity, because a Δ
glnD
strain with an altered glutamine synthetase that cannot be adenylylated can grow well in MN medium. Various mutation and complementation studies were used to show that the critical uridylyltransferase activity of GlnD is localized to the N-terminal region. Mutants with intermediate levels of uridylyltransferase activity are differentially defective in
nif
gene expression, the posttranslational regulation of nitrogenase, and NtrB/NtrC function, indicating the complexity of the physiological role of GlnD. These results have implications for the interpretation of results obtained with GlnD in many other organisms.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology