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AraR, an <scp>l</scp> -Arabinose-Responsive Transcriptional Regulator in Corynebacterium glutamicum ATCC 31831, Exerts Different Degrees of Repression Depending on the Location of Its Binding Sites within the Three Target Promoter Regions

Authors :
Haruhiko Teramoto
Masayuki Inui
Takayuki Kuge
Source :
Journal of Bacteriology. 197:3788-3796
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
American Society for Microbiology, 2015.

Abstract

In Corynebacterium glutamicum ATCC 31831, a LacI-type transcriptional regulator AraR, represses the expression of l -arabinose catabolism ( araBDA ), uptake ( araE ), and the regulator ( araR ) genes clustered on the chromosome. AraR binds to three sites: one (BS B ) between the divergent operons ( araBDA and galM-araR ) and two (BS E1 and BS E2 ) upstream of araE . l -Arabinose acts as an inducer of the AraR-mediated regulation. Here, we examined the roles of these AraR-binding sites in the expression of the AraR regulon. BS B mutation resulted in derepression of both araBDA and galM-araR operons. The effects of BS E1 and/or BS E2 mutation on araE expression revealed that the two sites independently function as the cis elements, but BS E1 plays the primary role. However, AraR was shown to bind to these sites with almost the same affinity in vitro . Taken together, the expression of araBDA and araE is strongly repressed by binding of AraR to a single site immediately downstream of the respective transcriptional start sites, whereas the binding site overlapping the −10 or −35 region of the galM-araR and araE promoters is less effective in repression. Furthermore, downregulation of araBDA and araE dependent on l -arabinose catabolism observed in the BS B mutant and the AraR-independent araR promoter identified within galM-araR add complexity to regulation of the AraR regulon derepressed by l -arabinose. IMPORTANCE Corynebacterium glutamicum has a long history as an industrial workhorse for large-scale production of amino acids. An important aspect of industrial microorganisms is the utilization of the broad range of sugars for cell growth and production process. Most C. glutamicum strains are unable to use a pentose sugar l -arabinose as a carbon source. However, genes for l -arabinose utilization and its regulation have been recently identified in C. glutamicum ATCC 31831. This study elucidates the roles of the multiple binding sites of the transcriptional repressor AraR in the derepression by l -arabinose and thereby highlights the complex regulatory feedback loops in combination with l -arabinose catabolism-dependent repression of the AraR regulon in an AraR-independent manner.

Details

ISSN :
10985530 and 00219193
Volume :
197
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Bacteriology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6e1caa7af67833f2e6663f40871c7db9