Abstract
The regulator of fumarate and nitrate reduction (FNR) protein of Escherichia coli is an oxygen-responsive transcription regulator that acts mainly to activate the transcription of genes associated with anaerobic energy generation during periods of oxygen starvation. The hlyX gene of the swine pathogen Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae encodes an FNR homologue, HlyX, which can complement the anaerobic respiratory deficiencies of an fnr mutant. However, FNR and HlyX have distinct but overlapping regulons because during anaerobic incubation, hlyX-expressing E. coli K-12 strains produce an otherwise latent haemolysin. The gene encoding the 'latent' haemolysin has been designated hlyE and analysis of the promoter region by DNase I footprinting reveals the presence of an FNR- (HlyX-) binding site. Anaerobic expression of an hlyE::lacZ reporter was 6.5-fold higher in hlyX compared to fnr-expressing cells. Both FNR and HlyX recruited RNA polymerase to the hlyE promoter but formed different ternary complexes. One major transcript (tsp1) initiating at 78.5 bp downstream of the FNR-binding site and four minor transcripts initiating at 73.5 (tsp2), 71.5 (tsp3), 63.5 (tsp4) and 62.5 (tsp5) bp from the FNR site were detected. From the position of the FNR box relative to the transcript starts, hlyE is expressed from a Class I FNR-regulated promoter. Substitution of selected FNR amino acids with the residues found in the equivalent positions in HlyX indicated that Activating Region 1 (AR1) of FNR forms a surface encompassing beta to beta 11 and that the AR1 contact at Class I promoters is different to that at Class II promoters, although the same surface is involved. The FNR variant, FNR-A225T, combined the properties of FNR (good activation from Class II promoters) and HlyX (good activation of Class I promoters) and conferred the haemolytic phenotype.
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