Volume 270,
Number 31,
Issue of August 04, pp. 18615-18625, 1995
©1995 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
The
Molecular Cloning and Characterization of BM1P1 and BM1P2 Proteins,
Putative Positive Transcription Factors Involved in
Barbiturate-mediated Induction of the Genes Encoding Cytochrome
P450
of Bacillus megaterium
(Received for publication, December 13, 1994; and in revised form, March 21, 1995)
Jian-Sen
He
,
Qianwa
Liang
,
Armand J.
Fulco
Analysis of a 1.3-kilobase segment of 5`-flanking DNA from the
barbiturate-inducible P450
gene (CYP106) of Bacillus megaterium revealed two open reading frames. One, BM1P1, encodes 98 amino acids and is located 267 base pairs
upstream from the sequence encoding cytochrome P450
but
in the opposite orientation. The second, BM1P2 (88 amino
acids), is 892 base pairs upstream from the P450
coding
sequence and in the same coding strand. The expression of BM1P1 and BM1P2 was strongly stimulated in cells grown in the
presence of pentobarbital, and the BM1P1 gene product exerted
positive control on expression of P450
. When a 177-base pair fragment
encompassing the overlapping promoter regions of the P450
and BM1P1 genes was used
as a probe in DNA binding assays, the BM1P1 and BM1P2 gene products and Bm3R1 (the repressor protein regulating the
barbiturate-mediated expression of P450
) could bind individually, but the
addition of BM1P1 or BM1P2 to a binding mixture containing Bm3R1
completely prevented the appearance of a Bm3R1 binding band. When a
208-base pair fragment containing a Barbie box sequence and located
upstream of the 177-base pair fragment was used as a probe, only a
Bm3R1 binding band was detected. Although neither BM1P1 and BM1P2
appeared to bind to this 208-base pair fragment, their presence
strongly inhibited the binding of Bm3R1 to the same probe. The evidence
suggests that BM1P1 and BM1P2 may, in part, act as positive regulatory
proteins involved in the expression of the P450
gene by interfering with the binding of the repressor
protein, Bm3R1, to the regulatory regions of P450
.