Abstract
The major nitrogen-regulatory gene nit-2 of Neurospora crassa activates the expression of numerous unlinked structural genes which specify nitrogen-catabolic enzymes during conditions of nitrogen limitation. The nit-2 gene encodes a regulatory protein of 1036 amino acid residues with a single 'zinc finger' and a downstream basic region, which together may constitute a DNA-binding domain. The zinc finger domain of the NIT2 protein was synthesized in vitro and also expressed as a fusion protein in Escherichia coli to examine its DNA-binding activity. The wild-type NIT2 finger domain protein binds to the promoter region of nit-3, the nitrate reductase structural gene. A series of NIT2 mutant proteins obtained by site-directed mutagenesis was expressed and tested for functional activity. The results demonstrate that both the single zinc-finger motif and the downstream basic region of NIT2 are critical for its trans-activating function in vivo and specific DNA-binding in vitro.
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