RESUMO
The lactose utilization genes of Staphylococcus xylosus have been isolated and characterized. The system is comprised of two structural genes, lacP and lacH, encoding the lactose permease and the beta-galactosidase proteins, respectively, and a regulatory gene, lacR, coding for an activator of the AraC/XylS family. The lactose utilization genes are divergently arranged, the lacPH genes being opposite to lacR. The lacPH genes are cotranscribed from one promoter in front of lacP, whereas lacR is transcribed from two promoters of different strengths. Lactose transport as well as beta-galactosidase activity are inducible by the addition of lactose to the growth medium. Primer extension experiments demonstrated that regulation is achieved at the level of lacPH transcription initiation. Inducibility and efficient lacPH transcription are dependent on a functional lacR gene. Inactivation of lacR resulted in low and constitutive lacPH expression. Expression of lacR itself is practically constitutive, since transcription initiated at the major lacR promoter does not respond to the availability of lactose. Only the minor lacR promoter is lactose inducible. Apart from lactose-specific, LacR-dependent control, the lacPH promoter is also subject to carbon catabolite repression mediated by the catabolite control protein CcpA. When glucose is present in the growth medium, lacPH transcription initiation is reduced. Upon ccpA inactivation, repression at the lacPH promoter is relieved. Despite this loss of transcriptional regulation in the ccpA mutant strain, beta-galactosidase activity is still reduced by glucose, suggesting another level of control.
Assuntos
Proteínas de Escherichia coli , Regulação Bacteriana da Expressão Gênica , Genes Bacterianos , Lactose/metabolismo , Proteínas de Transporte de Monossacarídeos , Staphylococcus/genética , Simportadores , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Proteínas de Bactérias/genética , Sequência de Bases , Clonagem Molecular , Genes Reguladores , Proteínas de Membrana Transportadoras/genética , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Mutagênese Insercional , Regiões Promotoras Genéticas , Transcrição Gênica , beta-Galactosidase/metabolismoRESUMO
By transposon Tn917 mutagenesis, two mutants of Staphylococcus xylosus were isolated that showed higher levels of beta-galactosidase activity in the presence of glucose than the wild type. Both transposons integrated in a gene, designated glcU, encoding a protein involved in glucose uptake in S. xylosus, which is followed by a glucose dehydrogenase gene (gdh). Glucose-mediated repression of beta-galactosidase, alpha-glucosidase, and beta-glucuronidase activities was partially relieved in the mutant strains, while repression by sucrose or fructose remained as strong as in the wild type. In addition to the pleiotropic regulatory effect, integration of the transposons into glcU reduced glucose dehydrogenase activity, suggesting cotranscription of glcU and gdh. Insertional inactivation of the gdh gene and deletion of the glcU gene without affecting gdh expression showed that loss of GlcU function is exclusively responsible for the regulatory defect. Reduced glucose repression is most likely the consequence of impaired glucose uptake in the glcU mutant strains. With cloned glcU, an Escherichia coli mutant deficient in glucose transport could grow with glucose as sole carbon source, provided a functional glucose kinase was present. Therefore, glucose is internalized by glcU in nonphosphorylated form. A gene from Bacillus subtilis, ycxE, that is homologous to glcU, could substitute for glcU in the E. coli glucose growth experiments and restored glucose repression in the S. xylosus glcU mutants. Three more proteins with high levels of similarity to GlcU and YcxE are currently in the databases. It appears that these proteins constitute a novel family whose members are involved in bacterial transport processes. GlcU and YcxE are the first examples whose specificity, glucose, has been determined.