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J Biol Chem, Vol. 274, Issue 4, 1942-1948, January 22, 1999
From the Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Chiba University, 1-33 Yayoi-cho, Inage-ku, Chiba 263-8522, Japan
Inhibition of spermidine uptake in
Escherichia coli, which occurs in the presence of
accumulated polyamines, has been studied using the spermidine uptake
operon consisting of the potA, -B, -C, and -D genes. Transcription of the
potABCD operon was inhibited by PotD, a spermidine-binding
protein usually found in the periplasm, and the inhibitory effect of
PotD was increased by spermidine. Transcription was not affected by
bovine serum albumin, PotA, or PotF, suggesting that the effects of
PotD are specific to the PotD protein. In the presence of 8 mM spermidine, a 50% inhibition of transcription was
observed with a molar ratio of approximately 1:500 of template
DNA:PotD. It was found that PotD bound to regions
258 to
209
nucleotides upstream and +66 to +135 nucleotides downstream of the ATG
initiation codon of the potA gene. Binding of PotD to the
downstream site was stimulated by spermidine. Overexpression of PotD in
Escherichia coli DH5
inhibited the uptake of spermidine, the synthesis of PotABCD mRNA, and expression of a
lacZ reporter gene fused downstream of a potA
gene containing the PotD binding sites. In cells overexpressing PotD, a
large amount of PotD existed as PotD precursor in spheroplasts. Our
results indicate that PotD precursor can also inhibit spermidine
transport. The amino acid residues in PotD that are involved in its
interaction with the potABCD operon were determined using
mutated PotD proteins. Thr-35 and Ser-85 of PotD were found to be
important for this interaction. These results suggest that
transcription of the spermidine transport (potABCD) operon
is inhibited in vivo by PotD precursor rather than PotD
through its binding to two regions close to the transcriptional initiation site of the operon.
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