Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P51532 (transcriptional activator)
6,546 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Transcription of the three unlinked, homologous STA1-3 glucoamylase-encoding genes, involved in starch degradation by Saccharomyces cerevisiae, was previously shown to be down-regulated by the presence of STA10, acting via three upstream repression sequence regions that were identified in the STA2 promoter. Here we report the cloning and characterization of a putative transcriptional activator gene, MSS10 (multicopy suppressor of STA10), which, when present in multiple copies, overcomes STA10 repression. Deletion of MSS10, located on chromosome XV, resulted in media-specific extinction of glucoamylase synthesis. The nucleotide sequence of MSS10 is identical to three other genes from S. cerevisiae identified as: FUP1, a gene that enhances iron-limited growth; PHD2, a gene identified for its ability to induce pseudohyphal growth in diploid cells grown on nitrogen-limited media; and MSN1, a gene encoding a transcriptional activator involved in invertase regulation.
...
PMID:A multicopy suppressor gene, MSS10, restores STA2 expression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains containing the STA10 repressor gene. 866 91

RegA is a transcriptional activator that controls exotoxin A (ETA) production in Pseudomonas aeruginosa. To date, functional assays performed with the purified protein have not clearly defined the molecular mechanism of action of RegA. In this study, we sought to identify important coding regions of regA by analysing the sequences around linker insertion mutations in regA that affected toxA transcription. First, we constructed a strain with the regAB locus deleted from the chromosome, PA103 delta regAB::Gm. toxA transcription was obliterated in strain PA103 delta regAB::Gm, demonstrating that the regAB locus is essential for ETA production. Next, we constructed a series of 6 bp linker insertion mutations distributed throughout regA. These regA linker insertion mutants were sequenced and screened in PA103 delta regAB::Gm for their effects on regulation of ETA production. Six linker insertion mutations occurring between amino acids (aa) 53 and 163 of RegA were isolated that resulted in depression of toxA transcription to varying levels relative to the parental regAB locus. One of these linker insertion mutations (pTR53), resulted in a lack of iron-regulated ETA production and occurred directly upstream from a predicted transmembrane alpha-helix. The other five linker mutations (pTR88, pTR124, pTR132, pTR132-2 and pTR163) occurred within or flanked a region of RegA between aa 87-142 with similarity to the transcriptional activation domains of ToxR, VirG and OmpR. These data suggest the presence of a previously unidentified transcriptional activation domain in RegA between aa 87-142 and implicate the predicted transmembrane alpha-helix in the N-terminus as being involved in sensory transduction.
...
PMID:Linker insertion scanning of regA, an activator of exotoxin A production in Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 893 Sep 9

The pesticin receptor (Psn) of Yersinia pestis confers sensitivity to the bacteriocin, pesticin, and is an integral component of an inorganic-iron-transport system that functions at 37 degrees C. Synthesis of Psn is under the control of its own promoter and is regulated by iron and probably by the presence of its cognate siderophore. We have used a psn promoter fusion with lacZ to identify cis- and trans-acting factors which affect transcription of the psn gene. As expected, expression of lacZ from this construct was iron regulated and repressed by Fur. Mutations within a putative siderophore biosynthetic gene (irp2) also decreased expression. A set of repeats adjacent to the -35 region of the psn promoter was required for maximum expression of the psn::lacZ gene. Sequence analysis of the region upstream of irp2 revealed the presence of a gene (ybtA) with homology to the AraC family of transcriptional regulators. Insertional inactivation of ybtA resulted in decreased synthesis of Psn and proteins encoded by the irp2 operon as well as decreased expression from the psn::lacZ promoter fusion, indicating that YbtA is a transcriptional activator for psn and the putative siderophore biosynthetic genes. YbtA also represses its own transcription.
...
PMID:YbtA, an AraC-type regulator of the Yersinia pestis pesticin/yersiniabactin receptor. 893 Sep 16

The Vibrio cholerae fur gene was previously cloned and sequenced. A putative Fur box was identified in the divergent promoters of irgA, a virulence factor of V. cholerae, and irgB, a transcriptional activator of irgA. In this work, V. cholerae Fur was overexpressed in Escherichia coli and purified to approximately 95% homogeneity. The purified protein bound a DNA fragment containing the irgA-irgB promoter in a gel shift assay. The purified protein was used to raise monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies to V. cholerae Fur, and a Fur sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was developed to estimate the intracellular abundance of Fur under a variety of growth conditions. The number of Fur molecules per cell during exponential growth was approximately 2,500, which is higher than most measurements for other bacterial repressors but comparable to the intracellular concentration of the leucine-responsive regulatory protein. The number of Fur molecules per cell increased in the late logarithmic and stationary phases. Growth of V. cholerae in low-iron medium did not alter the intracellular abundance of Fur significantly. Growth under microaerophilic conditions resulted in a significant, approximately twofold decrease in the intracellular levels of Fur. The measurements of intracellular Fur abundance indicate that a large amount of this repressor is produced constitutively and that the concentration of Fur in the cell varies by less than a factor of 2 under the conditions studied. We hypothesize that the high constitutive expression of Fur is necessary for its role as an iron-responsive regulator.
...
PMID:Purification of Vibrio cholerae fur and estimation of its intracellular abundance by antibody sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. 898 4

Studies on erythropoietin (Epo) gene expression have been useful in investigating the mechanism by which cells and tissues sense hypoxia. Both in vivo and in Hep3B cells. Epo production is induced not only by hypoxia but also by certain transition metal (cobalt and nickel) and by iron chelation. When Hep3B cells were incubated in an iron deficient medium, Epo mRNA expression was enhanced fourfold compared to Hep3B cells in iron enriched medium. Epo induction by cobalt was inversely related to iron concentration in the medium, indicating competition between the two metals. Under hyperbaric oxygen, cobalt induction of erythropoietin mRNA was modestly suppressed while nickel induction was markedly enhanced. These recent observations support the proposal that the oxygen sensor is a heme protein in which cobalt and nickel can substitute for iron in the porphyrin ring. The up-regulation of Epo gene transcription by hypoxia depends on at least two known DNA binding transcription factors, HIF-1 and HNF-4, which bind to cognate response elements in a critical approximately 50 bp 3' enhancer. Hypoxia induces HIF-1 binding. HNF-4, an orphan nuclear receptor constitutively expressed in kidney and liver, binds downstream of HIF-1 and cooperates with HIF-1, contributing importantly to high level and perhaps tissue specific expression. The C-terminal activation domain of HNF-4 binds to the beta subunit of HIF-1. The C-terminal portion of the alpha subunit of HIF-1 binds specifically to p300, a general transcriptional activator. Hypoxic induction of the endogenous Epo gene in Hep3B cells as well as an Epo-reporter gene was fully inhibited by E1A, an adenovirus protein that binds to and inactivates p300, but only slightly by a mutant E1A that fails to bind to p300. Moreover, overexpression of p300 enhanced hypoxic induction. Thus, it is likely that in hypoxic cells, p300 or a related family member plays a critical role in forming a macromolecular assembly with HIF-1 and HNF-4, enabling transduction from the Epo 3' enhancer to the apparatus on the promoter responsible for the initiation of transcription.
...
PMID:Erythropoietin gene regulation depends on heme-dependent oxygen sensing and assembly of interacting transcription factors. 902 36

High-affinity iron uptake in Saccharomyces cerevisiae involves the extracytoplasmic reduction of ferric ions by FRE1 and FRE2 reductases. Ferrous ions are then transported across the plasma membrane through the FET3 oxidase-FTR1 permease complex. Expression of the high-affinity iron uptake genes is induced upon iron deprivation. We demonstrate that AFT1 is differentially involved in such regulation. Aft1 protein is required for maintaining detectable non-induced level of FET3 expression and for induction of FRE2 in iron starvation conditions. On the contrary, FRE1 mRNA induction is normal in the absence of Aft1, although the existence of AFT1 point mutations causing constitutive expression of FRE1 (Yamaguchi-Iwai et al., EMBO J. 14: 1231-1239, 1995) indicates that Aft1 may also participate in FRE1 expression in a dispensable way. The alterations in the basal levels of expression of the high-affinity iron uptake genes may explain why the AFT1 mutant is unable to grow on respirable carbon sources. Overexpression of AFT1 leads to growth arrest of the G1 stage of the cell cycle. Aft1 is a transcriptional activator that would be part of the different transcriptional complexes interacting with the promoter of the high-affinity iron uptake genes. Aft1 displays phosphorylation modifications depending on the growth stage of the cells, and it might link induction of genes for iron uptake to other metabolically dominant requirement for cell growth.
...
PMID:The AFT1 transcriptional factor is differentially required for expression of high-affinity iron uptake genes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 920 Aug 12

In Klebsiella pneumoniae NifL antagonizes the action of the transcriptional activator NifA in the presence of molecular oxygen or combined nitrogen. To determine what cofactors might be involved in the oxygen sensing mechanism, we purified and analyzed fusion proteins made between the Escherichia coli maltose binding protein, MalE, and NifL. NifL synthesized and purified under strictly anaerobic conditions did not contain significant amounts of iron or acid-labile sulfur indicating the absence of an oxygen sensing iron-sulfur cluster. However, NifL protein purified in its inhibitory form contained 0.3 +/- 0.01 mol FAD and less than 0.01 mol FMN per mol NifL suggesting the presence of FAD as a cofactor. Characterization of NifL synthesized in the absence of oxygen and combined nitrogen showed that the non-inhibitory form of NifL also contained FAD (0.54 mol FAD per mol NifL). Using fusions between MalE and different portions of NifL we localized the binding site of FAD to the N-terminal domain of NifL. These results and our previous observation that the C-terminal domain of NifL is sufficient to inhibit NifA activity indicate that the N-terminally bound FAD is not directly required for the inhibitory activity of NifL. This observation is supported by the finding that purified apoprotein of NifL was still able to inhibit transcriptional activation by NifA in vitro.
...
PMID:NifL of Klebsiella pneumoniae carries an N-terminally bound FAD cofactor, which is not directly required for the inhibitory function of NifL. 943 14

The high affinity uptake systems for iron and copper ions in Saccharomyces cerevisiae involve metal-specific permeases and two known cell surface Cu(II) and Fe(III) metalloreductases, Fre1 and Fre2. Five novel genes found in the S. cerevisiae genome exhibit marked sequence similarity to Fre1 and Fre2, suggesting that the homologs are part of a family of proteins related to Fre1 and Fre2. The homologs are expressed genes in S. cerevisiae, and their expression is metalloregulated as is true with FRE1 and FRE2. Four of the homologs (FRE3-FRE6) are specifically iron-regulated through the Aft1 transcription factor. These genes are expressed either in cells limited for iron ion uptake by treatment with a chelator or in cells lacking the high affinity iron uptake system. Expression of FRE3-FRE6 is elevated in AFT1-1 cells and attenuated in aft1 null cells, showing that iron modulation occurs through the Aft1 transcriptional activator. The fifth homolog FRE7 is specifically copper-metalloregulated. FRE7 is expressed in cells limited in copper ion uptake by a Cu(I)-specific chelator or in cells lacking the high affinity Cu(I) permeases. The constitutive expression of FRE7 in MAC1 cells and the lack of expression in mac1-1 cells are consistent with Mac1 being the critical transcriptional activator of FRE7 expression. The 5' promoter sequence of FRE7 contains three copper-responsive promoter elements. Two elements are critical for Mac1-dependent FRE7 expression. Combinations of either the distal and central elements or the central and proximal elements result in copper-regulated FRE7 expression. Spacing between Mac1-responsive sites is important as shown by the attenuated expression of FRE7 and CTR1 when two elements are separated by over 100 base pairs. From the three Mac1-responsive elements in FRE7, a new consensus sequence for Mac1 binding can be established as TTTGC(T/G)C(A/G).
...
PMID:Metalloregulation of FRE1 and FRE2 homologs in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 972 78

Cloning and molecular ecological studies have underestimated the diversity of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) catabolic genes by emphasizing classical nah-like (nah, ndo, pah, and dox) sequences. Here we report the description of a divergent set of PAH catabolic genes, the phn genes, which although isofunctional to the classical nah-like genes, show very low homology. This phn locus, which contains nine open reading frames (ORFs), was isolated on an 11.5-kb HindIII fragment from phenanthrene-degrading Burkholderia sp. strain RP007. The phn genes are significantly different in sequence and gene order from previously characterized genes for PAH degradation. They are transcribed by RP007 when grown at the expense of either naphthalene or phenanthrene, while in Escherichia coli the recombinant phn enzymes have been shown to be capable of oxidizing both naphthalene and phenanthrene to predicted metabolites. The locus encodes iron sulfur protein alpha and beta subunits of a PAH initial dioxygenase but lacks the ferredoxin and reductase components. The dihydrodiol dehydrogenase of the RP007 pathway, PhnB, shows greater similarity to analogous dehydrogenases from described biphenyl pathways than to those characterized from naphthalene/phenanthrene pathways. An unusual extradiol dioxygenase, PhnC, shows no similarity to other extradiol dioxygenases for naphthalene or biphenyl oxidation but is the first member of the recently proposed class III extradiol dioxygenases that is specific for polycyclic arene diols. Upstream of the phn catabolic genes are two putative regulatory genes, phnR and phnS. Sequence homology suggests that phnS is a LysR-type transcriptional activator and that phnR, which is divergently transcribed with respect to phnSFECDAcAdB, is a member of the sigma54-dependent family of positive transcriptional regulators. Reverse transcriptase PCR experiments suggest that this gene cluster is coordinately expressed and is under regulatory control which may involve PhnR and PhnS.
...
PMID:The phn genes of Burkholderia sp. strain RP007 constitute a divergent gene cluster for polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon catabolism. 988 67

Iron chelators are pluripotent neuronal antiapoptotic agents that have been shown to enhance metabolic recovery in cerebral ischemia models. The precise mechanism(s) by which these agents exert their effects remains unclear. Recent studies have demonstrated that iron chelators activate a hypoxia signal transduction pathway in non-neuronal cells that culminates in the stabilization of the transcriptional activator hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) and increased expression of gene products that mediate hypoxic adaptation. We examined the hypothesis that iron chelators prevent oxidative stress-induced death in cortical neuronal cultures by inducing expression of HIF-1 and its target genes. We report that the structurally distinct iron chelators deferoxamine mesylate and mimosine prevent apoptosis induced by glutathione depletion and oxidative stress in embryonic cortical neuronal cultures. The protective effects of iron chelators are correlated with their ability to enhance DNA binding of HIF-1 and activating transcription factor 1(ATF-1)/cAMP response element-binding protein (CREB) to the hypoxia response element in cortical cultures and the H19-7 hippocampal neuronal cell line. We show that mRNA, protein, and/or activity levels for genes whose expression is known to be regulated by HIF-1, including glycolytic enzymes, p21(waf1/cip1), and erythropoietin, are increased in cortical neuronal cultures in response to iron chelator treatment. Finally, we demonstrate that cobalt chloride, which also activates HIF-1 and ATF-1/CREB in cortical cultures, also prevents oxidative stress-induced death in these cells. Altogether, these results suggest that iron chelators exert their neuroprotective effects, in part, by activating a signal transduction pathway leading to increased expression of genes known to compensate for hypoxic or oxidative stress.
...
PMID:Protection from oxidative stress-induced apoptosis in cortical neuronal cultures by iron chelators is associated with enhanced DNA binding of hypoxia-inducible factor-1 and ATF-1/CREB and increased expression of glycolytic enzymes, p21(waf1/cip1), and erythropoietin. 1055 91


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>