Expression and characterization of ArgR, an arginine regulatory protein in Corynebacterium crenatum.
- Author:
Xue Lan CHEN
1
;
Bin ZHANG
1
;
Li TANG
1
;
Hai Tao JIAO
1
;
Heng Yi XU
2
;
Feng XU
2
;
Hong XU
3
;
Hua WEI
2
;
Yong Hua XIONG
2
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords: ArgR protein; Arginine biosynthetic genes; Corynebacterium crenatum; Electrophoretic mobility shift assay; Real-time PCR
- MeSH: Arginine; biosynthesis; Bacterial Proteins; chemistry; genetics; metabolism; Corynebacterium; genetics; metabolism; Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial; Repressor Proteins; chemistry; genetics; metabolism
- From: Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2014;27(6):436-443
- CountryChina
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVECorynebacterium crenatum MT, a mutant from C. crenatum AS 1.542 with a lethal argR gene, exhibits high arginine production. To confirm the effect of ArgR on arginine biosynthesis in C. crenatum, an intact argR gene from wild-type AS 1.542 was introduced into C. crenatum MT, resulting in C. crenatum MT. sp, and the changes of transcriptional levels of the arginine biosynthetic genes and arginine production were compared between the mutant strain and the recombinant strain.
METHODSQuantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction was employed to analyze the changes of the related genes at the transcriptional level, electrophoretic mobility shift assays were used to determine ArgR binding with the argCJBDF, argGH, and carAB promoter regions, and arginine production was determined with an automated amino acid analyzer.
RESULTSArginine production assays showed a 69.9% reduction in arginine from 9.01 ± 0.22 mg/mL in C. crenatum MT to 2.71 ± 0.13 mg/mL (P<0.05) in C. crenatum MT. sp. The argC, argB, argD, argF, argJ, argG, and carA genes were down-regulated significantly in C. crenatum MT. sp compared with those in its parental C. crenatum MT strain. The electrophoretic mobility shift assays showed that the promoter regions were directly bound to the ArgR protein.
CONCLUSIONThe arginine biosynthetic genes in C. crenatum are clearly controlled by the negative regulator ArgR, and intact ArgR in C. crenatum MT results in a significant descrease in arginine production.