| Literature DB >> 21151646 |
Eveline Peeters1, Daniel Charlier.
Abstract
Archaea possess a eukaryotic-type basal transcription apparatus that is regulated by bacteria-like transcription regulators. A universal and abundant family of transcription regulators are the bacterial/archaeal Lrp-like regulators. The Lrp family is one of the best studied regulator families in archaea, illustrated by investigations of proteins from the archaeal model organisms: Sulfolobus, Pyrococcus, Methanocaldococcus, and Halobacterium. These regulators are extremely versatile in their DNA-binding properties, response to effector molecules, and molecular regulatory mechanisms. Besides being involved in the regulation of the amino acid metabolism, they also regulate central metabolic processes. It appears that these regulatory proteins are also involved in large regulatory networks, because of hierarchical regulations and the possible combinatorial use of different Lrp-like proteins. Here, we discuss the recent developments in our understanding of this important class of regulators.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21151646 PMCID: PMC2995911 DOI: 10.1155/2010/750457
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Archaea Impact factor: 3.273
Figure 1Structural features of archaeal Lrp-like proteins. (a) Monomeric structure of Grp from S. tokodaii (PDB 2E7W) [31]. Secondary structure elements are named as follows: α-helices are called αA–αE and β-strands β1–β5. The N-terminal DNA-binding domain corresponds to the bottom part of the structure, the C-terminal ligand binding domain to the top part. These are labeled DNA-binding domain and RAM domain, respectively. (b) Cocrystal structure of an FL11 dimer bound to DNA (PDB 2E1C) [30]. (c) Octameric structure of LrpA from P. furiosus (PDB 1I1G) [28]. (d) Cocrystal structure of an arginine-bound octamer of FL11 from P. horikoshii, which has an open conformation (PDB 2ZNY) [32]. The position of the arginine molecules is shown by purple symbols.
Archaeal Lrp-like regulators with identified effector molecules. Generally, effector molecules have been identified based on effects on association state or DNA binding. This does not imply that they have a regulatory function. Stand-alone RAM domain proteins are indicated with an asterisk.
| Organism | Name | Effector(s) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
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| LrpA1 | Asp | [ |
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| DM1* | Ile, Val, Arg, Leu, Met, Phe | [ |
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| DM2* | Gln | [ |
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| DM3* | Phe, Val, Met, Ile, Leu | [ |
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| FL4 | Glu | [ |
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| FL5 | Phe, Ile, Leu, Val, Met | [ |
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| FL11 | Lys, Arg, Gln | [ |
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| LysM | Lys | [ |
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| Grp | Gln | [ |
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| STS042* | Ile | [ |
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| TvDM* | Ile, Leu, Phe, Met, Val | [ |
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| TvFL3 | Lys | [ |
Archaeal Lrp-like regulators with identified target genes or operons. Autoregulatory targets and targets with unknown function are not included in this list. For FL11, only a fraction of the (potential) targets are shown [30].
| Organism | Name | Target(s) | Biological process | Reference | |||||
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| Lrp |
| transcription | [ | |||||
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| transport | ||||||||
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| amino acid metabolism | ||||||||
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| central metabolism | ||||||||
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| signal transduction | ||||||||
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| LrpA1 |
| amino acid metabolism | [ | |||||
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| transcription | ||||||||
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| Ptr2 |
| electron transport | [ | |||||
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| LrpA |
| central metabolism | [ | |||||
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| FL11 | ATPase | ATP biosynthesis | [ | |||||
| NAD(P)H dehydrogenase | central metabolism | ||||||||
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| amino acid metabolism | ||||||||
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| LysM |
| amino acid metabolism | [ | |||||
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| Ss-LrpB |
| central metabolism | [ | |||||
| permeases | transport | ||||||||