TY - JOUR
T1 - Transcription regulation of restriction-modification system Esp1396I
AU - Bogdanova, Ekaterina
AU - Zakharova, Marina
AU - Streeter, Simon
AU - Taylor, James
AU - Heyduk, Tomasz
AU - Kneale, Geoff
AU - Severinov, Konstantin
N1 - Funding Information:
National Institutes of Health (RO1 grant GM59295); National Institutes of Health (FIRCA research grant R03 TW07145); Presidium of Russian Academy of Sciences Molecular and Cellular Biology Program grant (to K.S.) in part. Charles and Johanna Busch Foundation postdoctoral fellowship (to E.B.) in part. BBSRC (BB/E000878/1 to G.K.). Funding for open access charge: National Institutes of Health (grant GM59295 to KS).
PY - 2009
Y1 - 2009
N2 - The convergently transcribed restriction (R) and methylase (M) genes of the Restriction-Modification system Esp1396I are tightly regulated by a controller (C) protein that forms part of the CR operon. We have mapped the transcriptional start sites from each promoter and examined the regulatory role of C.Esp1396I in vivo and in vitro. C-protein binding at the CR and M promoters was analyzed by DNA footprinting and a range of biophysical techniques. The distal and proximal C-protein binding sites at the CR promoter are responsible for activation and repression, respectively. In contrast, a C-protein dimer binds to a single site at the M-promoter to repress the gene, with an affinity much greater than for the CR promoter. Thus, during establishment of the system in a naïve host, the activity of the M promoter is turned off early, preventing excessive synthesis of methylase. Mutational analysis of promoter binding sites reveals that the tetranucleotide inverted repeats long believed to be important for C-protein binding to DNA are less significant than previously thought. Instead, symmetry-related elements outside of these repeats appear to be critical for the interaction and are discussed in terms of the recent crystal structure of C.Esp139I bound to the CR promoter.
AB - The convergently transcribed restriction (R) and methylase (M) genes of the Restriction-Modification system Esp1396I are tightly regulated by a controller (C) protein that forms part of the CR operon. We have mapped the transcriptional start sites from each promoter and examined the regulatory role of C.Esp1396I in vivo and in vitro. C-protein binding at the CR and M promoters was analyzed by DNA footprinting and a range of biophysical techniques. The distal and proximal C-protein binding sites at the CR promoter are responsible for activation and repression, respectively. In contrast, a C-protein dimer binds to a single site at the M-promoter to repress the gene, with an affinity much greater than for the CR promoter. Thus, during establishment of the system in a naïve host, the activity of the M promoter is turned off early, preventing excessive synthesis of methylase. Mutational analysis of promoter binding sites reveals that the tetranucleotide inverted repeats long believed to be important for C-protein binding to DNA are less significant than previously thought. Instead, symmetry-related elements outside of these repeats appear to be critical for the interaction and are discussed in terms of the recent crystal structure of C.Esp139I bound to the CR promoter.
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U2 - 10.1093/nar/gkp210
DO - 10.1093/nar/gkp210
M3 - Article
C2 - 19336410
AN - SCOPUS:67249085515
SN - 0305-1048
VL - 37
SP - 3354
EP - 3366
JO - Nucleic acids research
JF - Nucleic acids research
IS - 10
ER -