| Literature DB >> 27558202 |
Davide Roncarati1, Simone Pelliciari1, Nicola Doniselli2, Stefano Maggi2, Andrea Vannini1, Luca Valzania1, Luca Mazzei1, Barbara Zambelli1, Claudio Rivetti2, Alberto Danielli1.
Abstract
Short-range DNA looping has been proposed to affect promoter activity in many bacterial species and operator configurations, but only few examples have been experimentally investigated in molecular detail. Here we present evidence for a metal-responsive DNA condensation mechanism controlled by the Helicobacter pylori ferric uptake regulator (Fur), an orthologue of the widespread Fur family of prokaryotic metal-dependent regulators. H. pylori Fur represses the transcription of the essential arsRS acid acclimation operon through iron-responsive oligomerization and DNA compaction, encasing the arsR transcriptional start site in a repressive macromolecular complex. A second metal-dependent regulator NikR functions as nickel-dependent anti-repressor at this promoter, antagonizing the binding of Fur to the operator elements responsible for the DNA condensation. The results allow unifying H. pylori metal ion homeostasis and acid acclimation in a mechanistically coherent model, and demonstrate, for the first time, the existence of a selective metal-responsive DNA compaction mechanism controlling bacterial transcriptional regulation.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27558202 PMCID: PMC5007355 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms12593
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919