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J. Bacteriol., Apr 1995, 1994-2001, Vol 177, No. 8
F Matsunaga, Y Kawasaki, M Ishiai, K Nishikawa, T Yura and C Wada
The RepE initiator protein (251 residues) is essential for mini-F
replication in Escherichia coli and exhibits two major functions:
initiation of DNA replication from ori2 and autogenous repression of repE
transcription. Whereas the initiation is mediated by RepE monomers that
bind to the ori2 iterons (direct repeats), the autogenous repression is
mediated by dimers that bind to the repE operator, which contains an
inverted repeat sequence related to the iterons. We now report that the
binding of RepE to these DNA sites is primarily determined by the
C-terminal region of this protein. The mutant RepE proteins lacking either
the N-terminal 33 (or more) residues or the C- terminal 7 (or more)
residues were first shown to be defective in binding to both the ori2 and
the operator DNAs. However, direct screening and analysis of mutant RepEs
which are specifically affected in binding to the ori2 iterons revealed
that the mutations (mostly amino acid substitutions) occur exclusively in
the C-terminal region (residues 168 to 242). These mutant proteins
exhibited reduced binding to ori2 and no detectable binding to the
operator. Thus, whereas truncation of either end of RepE can destroy the
DNA-binding activities, the C-terminal region appears to represent a
primary DNA- binding domain of RepE for both ori2 and the operator.
Analogous DNA- binding domains seem to be conserved among the initiator
proteins of certain related plasmids.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
DNA-binding domain of the RepE initiator protein of mini-F plasmid: involvement of the carboxyl-terminal region
Institute for Virus Research, Kyoto University, Japan.
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