Abstract
The Klebsiella pneumoniae nitrogen regulatory protein NTRC is a response regulator which activates transcription in response to nitrogen limitation, and is a member of the family of sigma N-dependent enhancer-binding proteins. Using limited trypsin digestion, two domains of NTRC were detected and conformational changes within the protein in response to the binding of ligands were also observed. In the absence of ligands, the major digestion products were 42, 36 and 12.5 kDa bands corresponding to the central plus C-terminal domain, the central domain, and the N-terminal domains, respectively. Upon binding of purine but not pyrimidine nucleotides, the 36 kDa band was insensitive to further proteolysis, indicative of a conformational change in the central domain. Analysis of the dependence of this insensitivity on ATP gamma S concentration suggested an apparent dissociation constant (Kd) for ATP gamma S of 150 microM. In the presence of DNA, both the central and C-terminal domains of NTRC were insensitive to proteolytic cleavage, indicative of a further conformational change. NTRC S160F, a mutant form of NTRC that is active in the absence of phosphorylation, was more stable to proteolysis than the wild-type protein. This mutant protein is apparently locked in a conformation resembling the DNA-bound form of wild-type NTRC. The involvement of ligands in self-association was studied using sedimentation equilibrium analysis. In the absence of ligand, wild-type NTRC displayed a monomer-dimer equilibrium with a Kd of 6 microM. In the presence of ATP gamma S the equilibrium was shifted towards the dimer form (Kd = 0.8 microM). A similar dissociation constant for the monomer-dimer interaction was observed with NTRC S160F in the absence of ATP gamma S (Kd = 0.5 microM). The addition of ATP gamma S induced a significant association of NTRC S160F to higher-order states with a dimer-octamer model producing a slightly, but not significantly better fit to the data than a dimer-hexamer model. We propose that ligand-mediated self-association provides a common mechanism for activation of this class of transcriptional regulatory proteins.
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