| Literature DB >> 1736098 |
H P Gohl1, W Hausner, M Thomm.
Abstract
The nifH1 gene of Methanococcus thermolithotrophicus, which encodes the putative dinitrogenase reductase of an archaeon, was accurately transcribed in a homologous cell-free transcription system. Extracts of cells grown with N2 or ammonia as nitrogen source initiated transcription at the nifH1 promoter with similar efficiencies. We confirmed that cells grown under non-N2-fixing conditions do not contain significant amounts of nifH1-specific mRNA. The levels of cell-free transcription initiation at the nifH1 promoter were similar to those observed at a tRNA promoter. The DNA sequence from -40 to +5 relative to the initiator nucleotide of nifH1 mRNA contained all the information required for promoter activity. A mutational analysis of this section of DNA demonstrated that a TATA box at -25 and the TTGT motif (initiator element) at the transcription start site are essential for cell-free transcription. These elements are similar to the structural determinants of a known tRNA promoter of Methanococcus. Mutation of a sequence, showing homology to the bacterial NifA site, which overlaps the transcription start site, did not affect promoter activity. Hence, cell-free transcription of the Methanococcus nifH1 gene is independent of upstream activator elements and does not require alternate cis-acting sequences that differ from the methanogen consensus promoter. These findings suggest that the activation of nif promoters is brought about by fundamentally different mechanisms in Archaea and bacteria.Entities:
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Year: 1992 PMID: 1736098 DOI: 10.1007/bf00279802
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Gen Genet ISSN: 0026-8925