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IscR of Rhodobacter sphaeroides functions as repressor of genes for iron‐sulfur metabolism and represents a new type of iron‐sulfur‐binding protein
Author(s) -
Remes Bernhard,
Eisenhardt Benjamin D.,
Srinivasan Vasundara,
Klug Gabriele
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
microbiologyopen
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.881
H-Index - 36
ISSN - 2045-8827
DOI - 10.1002/mbo3.279
Subject(s) - rhodobacter sphaeroides , operon , repressor , gene , biology , gene cluster , biochemistry , iron–sulfur cluster , mutant , wild type , chemistry , gene expression , genetics , bacteria , enzyme
IscR proteins are known as transcriptional regulators for Fe–S biogenesis. In the facultatively phototrophic bacterium, Rhodobacter sphaeroides IscR is the product of the first gene in the isc ‐ suf operon. A major role of IscR in R. sphaeroides iron‐dependent regulation was suggested in a bioinformatic study (Rodionov et al., PLoS Comput Biol 2:e163, 2006), which predicted a binding site in the upstream regions of several iron uptake genes, named Iron‐Rhodo‐box. Most known IscR proteins have Fe–S clusters featuring (Cys) 3 (His) 1 ligation. However, IscR proteins from Rhodobacteraceae harbor only a single‐Cys residue and it was considered unlikely that they can ligate an Fe–S cluster. In this study, the role of R. sphaeroides IscR as transcriptional regulator and sensor of the Fe–S cluster status of the cell was analyzed. A mutant lacking IscR is more impaired in growth under iron limitation than the wild‐type and exhibits significantly increased ROS levels in iron‐replete and iron‐deplete conditions. Expression studies reveal that R. sphaeroides IscR in its cluster‐bound form functions as transcriptional repressor of genes involved in iron metabolism by direct binding to the promoter region of genes preceded by the motif. A total of 110 genes are directly or indirectly affected by IscR. Furthermore, IscR possesses a unique Fe–S cluster ligation scheme with only a single cysteine involved.

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