Reactions of Nitric Oxide and Oxygen with the Regulator of Fumarate and Nitrate Reduction, a Global Transcriptional Regulator, during Anaerobic Growth of Escherichia coli

Jason C. Crack, Nick E. Le Brun, Andrew J. Thomson, Jeffrey Green, Adrian J. Jervis

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    The Escherichia coli fumarate and nitrate reductase (FNR) regulator protein is an important transcriptional regulator that controls the expression of a large regulon of more than 100 genes in response to changes in oxygen availability. FNR is active when it acquires a [4Fe-4S] 2+ cluster under anaerobic conditions. The presence of the [4Fe-4S] 2+ cluster promotes protein dimerization and site-specific DNA binding, facilitating activation or repression of target promoters. Oxygen is sensed by the controlled disassembly of the [4Fe-4S] 2+ cluster, ultimately resulting in inactive, monomeric, apo-FNR. The FNR [4Fe-4S] 2+ cluster is also sensitive to nitric oxide, such that under anaerobic conditions the protein is inactivated by nitrosylation of the iron-sulfur cluster, yielding a mixture of monomeric and dimeric dinitrosyl-iron cysteine species. This chapter describes some of the methods used to produce active [4Fe-4S] FNR protein and investigates the reaction of the [4Fe-4S] 2+ cluster with nitric oxide and oxygen in vitro. © 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)191-209
    Number of pages18
    JournalMethods in Enzymology
    Volume437
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2008

    Research Beacons, Institutes and Platforms

    • Manchester Institute of Biotechnology

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