Symbiotic Autoregulation of nifA Expression in Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viciae

AUTOR(ES)
FONTE

American Society for Microbiology

RESUMO

NifA is the general transcriptional activator of nitrogen fixation genes in diazotrophic bacteria. In Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viciae UPM791, the nifA gene is part of a gene cluster (orf71 orf79 fixW orf5 fixABCX nifAB) separated by 896 bp from an upstream and divergent truncated duplication of nifH (ΔnifH). Symbiotic expression analysis of genomic nifA::lacZ fusions revealed that in strain UPM791 nifA is expressed mainly from a σ54-dependent promoter (PnifA1) located upstream of orf71. This promoter contains canonical NifA upstream activating sequences located 91 bp from the transcription initiation site. The transcript initiated in PnifA1 spans 5.1 kb and includes nifA and nifB genes. NifA from Klebsiella pneumoniae was able to activate transcription from PnifA1 in a heterologous Escherichia coli system. In R. leguminosarum, the PnifA1 promoter is essential for effective nitrogen fixation in symbiosis with peas. In its absence, partially efficient nitrogen-fixing nodules were produced, and the corresponding bacteroids exhibited only low levels of nifA gene expression. The basal level of nifA expression resulted from a promoter activity originating upstream of the fixX-nifA intergenic region and probably from an incomplete duplication of PnifA1 located immediately upstream of fixA.

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