Feast/famine regulatory proteins (FFRPs):<i>Escherichia coli</i>Lrp, AsnC and related archaeal transcription factors

Katsushi Yokoyama(National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology), Sanae A. Ishijima(National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology), Lester Clowney(National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology), Hideaki Koike(National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology), Hironori Aramaki(Daiichi University of Pharmacy), Chikako Tanaka(National Defense Academy of Japan), Kozo Makino(National Defense Academy of Japan), Masashi Suzuki(National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology)
FEMS Microbiology Reviews
November 18, 2005
Cited by 124

Abstract

Feast/famine regulatory proteins comprise a diverse family of transcription factors, which have been referred to in various individual identifications, including Escherichia coli leucine-responsive regulatory protein and asparagine synthase C gene product. A full length feast/famine regulatory protein consists of the N-terminal DNA-binding domain and the C-domain, which is involved in dimerization and further assembly, thereby producing, for example, a disc or a chromatin-like cylinder. Various ligands of the size of amino acids bind at the interface between feast/famine regulatory protein dimers, thereby altering their assembly forms. Also, the combination of feast/famine regulatory protein subunits forming the same assembly is altered. In this way, a small number of feast/famine regulatory proteins are able to regulate a large number of genes in response to various environmental changes. Because feast/famine regulatory proteins are shared by archaea and eubacteria, the genome-wide regulation by feast/famine regulatory proteins is traceable back to their common ancestor, being the prototype of highly differentiated transcription regulatory mechanisms found in organisms nowadays.


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