Login / Signup

Structural insights into the transcription activation mechanism of the global regulator GlnR from actinobacteria.

Jing ShiZhenzhen FengJuncao XuFangfang LiYuqiong ZhangAijia WenFulin WangQian SongLu WangHong CuiShujuan TongPeiying ChenYejin ZhuGuoping ZhaoShuang WangYu FengWei Lin
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2023)
In actinobacteria, an OmpR/PhoB subfamily protein called GlnR acts as an orphan response regulator and globally coordinates the expression of genes responsible for nitrogen, carbon, and phosphate metabolism in actinobacteria. Although many researchers have attempted to elucidate the mechanisms of GlnR-dependent transcription activation, progress is impeded by lacking of an overall structure of GlnR-dependent transcription activation complex (GlnR-TAC). Here, we report a co-crystal structure of the C-terminal DNA-binding domain of GlnR (GlnR_DBD) in complex with its regulatory cis -element DNA and a cryo-EM structure of GlnR-TAC which comprises Mycobacterium tuberculosis RNA polymerase, GlnR, and a promoter containing four well-characterized conserved GlnR binding sites. These structures illustrate how four GlnR protomers coordinate to engage promoter DNA in a head-to-tail manner, with four N-terminal receiver domains of GlnR (GlnR-RECs) bridging GlnR_DBDs and the RNAP core enzyme. Structural analysis also unravels that GlnR-TAC is stabilized by complex protein-protein interactions between GlnR and the conserved β flap, σ A R4, αCTD, and αNTD domains of RNAP, which are further confirmed by our biochemical assays. Taken together, these results reveal a global transcription activation mechanism for the master regulator GlnR and other OmpR/PhoB subfamily proteins and present a unique mode of bacterial transcription regulation.
Keyphrases
  • transcription factor
  • dna binding
  • mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • protein protein
  • gene expression
  • small molecule
  • high resolution
  • cell free
  • single molecule
  • pulmonary tuberculosis