Crosstalk between bacterial chemotaxis signal transduction proteins and regulators of transcription of the Ntr regulon: evidence that nitrogen assimilation and chemotaxis are controlled by a common phosphotransfer mechanism.

Alexander J. Ninfa(Princeton University), E G Ninfa(Princeton University), Andrei N. Lupas(Princeton University), Ann Stock(Princeton University), Boris Magasanik(Princeton University), Jeffry B. Stock(Princeton University)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
August 1, 1988
Cited by 215Open Access
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Abstract

We demonstrate by using purified bacterial components that the protein kinases that regulate chemotaxis and transcription of nitrogen-regulated genes, CheA and NRII, respectively, have cross-specificities: CheA can phosphorylate the Ntr transcription factor NRI and thereby activate transcription from the nitrogen-regulated glnA promoter, and NRII can phosphorylate CheY. In addition, we find that a high intracellular concentration of a highly active mutant form of NRII can suppress the smooth-swimming phenotype of a cheA mutant. These results argue strongly that sensory transduction in the Ntr and Che systems involves a common protein phosphotransfer mechanism.


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