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The MocR family transcriptional regulator DnfR has multiple binding sites and regulates Dirammox gene transcription in Alcaligenes faecalis JQ135.

Si-Qiong XuXiao WangLu XuKe-Xin WangYin-Hu JiangFu-Yin ZhangQing HongJian HeShuang-Jiang LiuJi-Guo Qiu
Published in: Environmental microbiology (2022)
Microbial ammonia oxidation is vital to the nitrogen cycle. A biological process, called Dirammox (direct ammonia oxidation, NH 3 →NH 2 OH→N 2 ), has been recently identified in Alcaligenes ammonioxydans and A. faecalis. However, its transcriptional regulatory mechanism has not yet been fully elucidated. The present study characterized a new MocR-like transcription factor DnfR that is involved in the Dirammox process in A. faecalis strain JQ135. The entire dnf cluster was composed of ten genes and transcribed as five transcriptional units, i.e., dnfIH, dnfR, dnfG, dnfABCDE and dnfF. DnfR activates the transcription of dnfIH, dnfG, and dnfABCDE genes, and represses its own transcription. The intact 1,506-bp dnfR gene was required for activation of Dirammox. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays and DNase I footprinting analyses showed that DnfR has one binding site in the dnfH-dnfR intergenic region and two binding sites in the dnfG-dnfA intergenic region. Three binding sites of DnfR shared a 6-bp repeated conserved sequence 5'-GGTCTG-N 17 -GGTCTG-3' which was essential for the transcription of downstream target genes. Cysteine and glutamate act as possible effectors of DnfR to activate the transcription of transcriptional units of dnfG and dnfABCDE, respectively. This study provided new insights in the transcriptional regulation mechanism of Dirammox by DnfR in A. faecalis JQ135. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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