Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1318195 Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry 2006 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

The pathogenic bacteria Helicobacter pylori require nickel as a cofactor of the enzymes urease and hydrogenase. One of the proteins that controls nickel homeostasis in this organism is Helicobacter pylori NikR (HpNikR), a homologue of nickel-dependent transcription factors from other organisms, which regulates the expression of multiple proteins such as the urease structural subunits and itself. To examine the properties of this protein, metal analysis was used to demonstrate that HpNikR can bind stoichiometric nickel or copper, and electronic absorption spectroscopy revealed that HpNikR binds nickel with picomolar affinity in what is likely a conserved square-planar site. In vitro DNA-binding assays revealed that HpNikR can bind directly to the promoter region of the ureA operon in response to nickel, and the location of the binding site was defined. Nickel also induces DNA binding to the nikR promoter sequence but the complex is much weaker. These experiments suggest that HpNikR directly controls the expression of multiple genes by binding to separate DNA sequences, and the possible mechanisms for differential regulation are discussed.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Inorganic Chemistry
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