Abstract

We studied the effect of phosphorylation of nitrogen regulator I (NRI) on its binding properties. Both phosphorylated and unphosphorylated NRI bind linearly to a single binding site but cooperatively to two adjacent binding sites. Cooperative binding of NRI is severely affected by phosphorylation: half-maximal binding of NRI-phosphate is at 20-fold lower concentrations than that of unphosphorylated NRI. This is more due to a huge increase in the cooperativity constant--which is the strength of interaction between two NRI dimers--than to an increase in the microscopic binding constant which is the binding affinity to a single binding site. In vitro transcription and DNA footprinting experiments showed that occupation of a single binding site by NRI is not enough for efficient activation and that activation only occurs at a higher NRI concentration. We propose an activation mechanism for NRI in which the phosphorylation of NRI induces a conformational change in the N-terminal domains of the NRI-phosphate dimers, which now interact strongly with each other, leading to a tetramerization of NRI upon binding to two adjacent binding sites. We propose that not the phosphorylation of NRI itself but rather the tetramerization of NRI-phosphate on DNA binding induces the conformational change of the central domain to the active conformation.

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