The EMBO Journal
 
Advanced search
Journal home
Aims and scope
Current issue
Advance Online Publication
Web Focuses
Archive:-
Browse by issue
Browse by subject
Browse by category
Free online sample issue
Press releases
Authors & Referees
Editorial process
Guide for authors
Submit an article
Guide for referees
Editorial Team, Senior Advisors and Advisory Editorial Board
Contact Editorial office
Customer services
Subscribe
Order sample copy
Purchase articles
Reprints and permissions
Contact NPG
Advertising
EMBO
www.embo.org
Article
The EMBO Journal (1998) 17, 2629–2636, doi:10.1093/emboj/17.9.2629
The redox-regulated SoxR protein acts from a single DNA site as a repressor and an allosteric activator
Elena Hidalgo, Veronica Leautaud and Bruce Demple
Department of Cancer Cell Biology, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA 02115-6021, USA

To whom correspondence should be addressed
Bruce Demple, demple@mbcrr.harvard.edu

Received 27 November 1997; Revised 10 March 1998; Accepted 11 March 1998.
Abstract
The SoxR protein of Escherichia coli responds to redox signals by activating the transcription of soxS, which encodes another transcription activator that directly stimulates oxidative stress genes. We show here that transcription of the soxR gene, which is positioned head-to-head with soxS in the chromosome, initiates in the intergenic region and is itself repressed by SoxR protein in in vitro transcription experiments. Analysis of single-copy operon fusions to soxR, combined with the results of Northern blotting experiments, verified this regulation and the transcription start site in vivo. The structure of the overlapping promoters is such that the single SoxR-binding site is located in the -10/-35 spacer of the soxS promoter, but just downstream of the -10 element of the soxR promoter. Activated and non-activated SoxR bind this site equally well, exerting nearly constant repression of soxR; activated SoxR simultaneously stimulates the soxS promoter greater than or equal to30-fold. The functional soxR promoter depresses soxS transcription when SoxR is not activated and enhances soxS transcription when SoxR is activated, as shown by comparing the expression of soxS'::lacZ fusions with and without the soxR -35 element (induction ratio only approx7-fold). SoxR thus represents a highly polar, redox-regulated transcriptional switch that maximizes the change in expression of soxS.
Keywords: activator, repressor, SoxR, soxS, transcriptional switch
Send to a friendEmail link to a friend
PDFDownload PDF
Full textFull text
Next article
Previous article
Table of contents
rights and permissionsRights and permissions
order commercial reprintsReprints
ToC alertRegister for table of contents by email
  Privacy policy Copyright © 1998 by the European Molecular Biology Organization