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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2001, p. 4004-4011, Vol. 183, No. 13
Section of Biochemistry, Molecular and Cell
Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853
Received 5 March 2001/Accepted 13 April 2001
Lrp (leucine-responsive regulatory protein) plays a global
regulatory role in Escherichia coli, affecting expression
of dozens of operons. Numerous lrp-related genes have been
identified in different bacteria and archaea, including
asnC, an E. coli gene that was the first
reported member of this family. Pairwise comparisons of amino acid
sequences of the corresponding proteins shows an average sequence
identity of only 29% for the vast majority of comparisons. By
contrast, Lrp-related proteins from enteric bacteria show more than
97% amino acid identity. Is the global regulatory role associated with
E. coli Lrp limited to enteric bacteria? To probe this
question we investigated LrfB, an Lrp-related protein from
Haemophilus influenzae that shares 75% sequence identity with E. coli Lrp (highest sequence identity among 42 sequences compared). A strain of H. influenzae having an
lrfB null allele grew at the wild-type growth rate but with
a filamentous morphology. A comparison of two-dimensional (2D)
electrophoretic patterns of proteins from parent and mutant strains
showed only two differences (comparable studies with
lrp+ and lrp E. coli strains by
others showed 20 differences). The abundance of LrfB in H. influenzae, estimated by Western blotting experiments, was about
130 dimers per cell (compared to 3,000 dimers per E. coli
cell). LrfB expressed in E. coli replaced Lrp as a
repressor of the lrp gene but acted only to a limited
extent as an activator of the ilvIH operon. Thus, although
LrfB resembles Lrp sufficiently to perform some of its functions, its
low abundance is consonant with a more local role in regulating but a
few genes, a view consistent with the results of the 2D electrophoretic
analysis. We speculate that an Lrp having a global regulatory role
evolved to help enteric bacteria adapt to their ecological niches and that it is unlikely that Lrp-related proteins in other organisms have a
broad regulatory function.
0021-9193/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.183.13.4004-4011.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Global versus Local Regulatory Roles for
Lrp-Related Proteins: Haemophilus influenzae as a Case
Study

*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Section of
Biochemistry, Molecular and Cell Biology, Cornell University, 451 Biotechnology Building, Ithaca, NY 14853. Phone: (607) 255-2437. Fax:
(607) 255-2428. E-mail: jmc22{at}Cornell.edu.
Permanent address: Department of Molecular Genetics and
Biotechnology, The Hebrew University, Faculty of Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel 91120.
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