Allostery and Intrinsic Disorder Mediate Transcription Regulation by Conditional Cooperativity
Author(s) -
Abel GarciaPino,
Sreeram Balasubramanian,
Lode Wyns,
Ehud Gazit,
Henri De Greve,
Roy David Magnuson,
Daniël Charlier,
Nico A. J. van Nuland,
Remy Loris
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2010.05.039
Subject(s) - allosteric regulation , cooperativity , biology , operon , cooperative binding , psychological repression , transcription (linguistics) , biophysics , antitoxin , transcription factor , toxin , binding site , genetics , biochemistry , gene , gene expression , enzyme , linguistics , philosophy , escherichia coli
Regulation of the phd/doc toxin-antitoxin operon involves the toxin Doc as co- or derepressor depending on the ratio between Phd and Doc, a phenomenon known as conditional cooperativity. The mechanism underlying this observed behavior is not understood. Here we show that monomeric Doc engages two Phd dimers on two unrelated binding sites. The binding of Doc to the intrinsically disordered C-terminal domain of Phd structures its N-terminal DNA-binding domain, illustrating allosteric coupling between highly disordered and highly unstable domains. This allosteric effect also couples Doc neutralization to the conditional regulation of transcription. In this way, higher levels of Doc tighten repression up to a point where the accumulation of toxin triggers the production of Phd to counteract its action. Our experiments provide the basis for understanding the mechanism of conditional cooperative regulation of transcription typical of toxin-antitoxin modules. This model may be applicable for the regulation of other biological systems.
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