CorE from Myxococcus xanthus Is a Copper-Dependent RNA Polymerase Sigma Factor
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Gómez-Santos, Nuria; Pérez Torres, Juana; Sánchez-Sutil, María Celestina; Moraleda Muñoz, Aurelio; Muñoz Dorado, JoséEditorial
Plos One
Date
2011-06-02Referencia bibliográfica
Gómez-Santos N, Pérez J, Sánchez-Sutil MC, Moraleda-Muñoz A, Muñoz-Dorado J (2011) CorE from Myxococcus xanthus Is a Copper-Dependent RNA Polymerase Sigma Factor. PLoS Genet 7(6): e1002106. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1002106
Sponsorship
Grants from "Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación", Spain (BFU2006-00972/BMC, 70% funded by FEDER; and the program CONSOLIDER-INGENIO 2010, ref. CSD2009-00006) and Junta de Andalucía (CVI-1377); Postdoctoral fellowship from the "Plan Propio de la Universidad de Granada"Abstract
The dual toxicity/essentiality of copper forces cells to maintain a tightly regulated homeostasis for this metal in all living
organisms, from bacteria to humans. Consequently, many genes have previously been reported to participate in copper
detoxification in bacteria. Myxococcus xanthus, a prokaryote, encodes many proteins involved in copper homeostasis that
are differentially regulated by this metal. A σ factor of the ECF (extracytoplasmic function) family, CorE, has been found to
regulate the expression of the multicopper oxidase cuoB, the P1B-type ATPases copA and copB, and a gene encoding a
protein with a heavy-metal-associated domain. Characterization of CorE has revealed that it requires copper to bind DNA in
vitro. Genes regulated by CorE exhibit a characteristic expression profile, with a peak at 2 h after copper addition. Expression
rapidly decreases thereafter to basal levels, although the metal is still present in the medium, indicating that the activity of
CorE is modulated by a process of activation and inactivation. The use of monovalent and divalent metals to mimic Cu(I)
and Cu(II), respectively, and of additives that favor the formation of the two redox states of this metal, has revealed that
CorE is activated by Cu(II) and inactivated by Cu(I). The activation/inactivation properties of CorE reside in a Cys-rich domain
located at the C terminus of the protein. Point mutations at these residues have allowed the identification of several Cys
involved in the activation and inactivation of CorE. Based on these data, along with comparative genomic studies, a new
group of ECF σ factors is proposed, which not only clearly differs mechanistically from the other σ factors so far
characterized, but also from other metal regulators.