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J. Bacteriol., Sep 1997, 5914-5921, Vol 179, No. 18
HQ Smith and RL Somerville
The ability of microorganisms to degrade L-tyrosine to phenol, pyruvate,
and ammonia is catalyzed by the inducible enzyme L-tyrosine phenol lyase
(EC 4.1.99.2). To investigate possible mechanisms for how the synthesis of
this enzyme is regulated, a variety of biochemical and genetic procedures
was used to analyze transcription from the tpl promoter of Citrobacter
freundii ATCC 29063 (C. braakii). By computer analysis of the region
upstream of the tpl structural gene, two segments of DNA bearing strong
homology to the known operator targets of the TyrR protein of Escherichia
coli were detected. A DNA fragment of 509 bp carrying these operator
targets plus the presumptive tpl promoter was synthesized by PCR and used
to construct a single-copy tpl- lacZ reporter system. The formation of
beta-galactosidase in strains carrying this reporter system, which was
measured in E. coli strains of various genotypes, was strongly dependent on
the presence of a functional TyrR protein. In strains bearing deletions of
the tyrR gene, the formation of beta-galactosidase was reduced by a factor
of 10. Several mutationally altered forms of TyrR were deficient in their
abilities to activate the tpl promoter. The pattern of loss of activation
function was exactly parallel to the effects of the same tyrR mutations on
the mtr promoter, which is known to be activated by the TyrR protein. When
cells carrying the tpl-lacZ reporter system were grown on glycerol, the
levels of beta-galactosidase were 10- to 20-fold higher than those observed
in glucose-grown cells. The effect was the same whether or not
TyrR-mediated stimulation of the tpl promoter was in effect. By deleting
the cya gene, it was shown that the glycerol effect was attributable to
stimulation of the tpl promoter by the cyclic AMP (cAMP)-cAMP reporter
protein system. A presumptive binding site for this transcription factor
was detected just upstream of the - 35 recognition hexamer of the tpl
promoter. The transcriptional start point of the tpl promoter was
determined by chemical procedures. The precise locations of the TyrR
binding sites, which were established by DNase I footprinting, agreed with
the computer-predicted positions of these regulatory sites. The two TyrR
operators, which were centered at coordinates -272.5 and -158.5 with
respect to the transcriptional start point, were independently disabled by
site-directed mutagenesis. When the upstream operator was altered,
activation was completely abolished. When the downstream operator was
altered, there was a fourfold reduction in reporter enzyme levels. The tpl
system presents a number of intriguing features not previously encountered
in TyrR-activated promoters. First among these is the question of how the
TyrR protein, bound to widely separated operators, activates the tpl
promoter which is also widely separated from the operators.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
The tpl promoter of Citrobacter freundii is activated by the TyrR protein
Department of Biochemistry, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907, USA.
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