Publication | Open Access
NrrA, a nitrogen‐responsive response regulator facilitates heterocyst development in the cyanobacterium <i>Anabaena</i> sp. strain PCC 7120
133
Citations
36
References
2006
Year
Nitrogen‐responsive Response RegulatorGeneticsBacteriologyMolecular BiologyMicrobial PhysiologyCyanobacteriaTranscriptional RegulationReactive Nitrogen SpecieGene StructureHeterocyst DevelopmentMicrobial EcologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyNrra GeneNitrogen DeprivationMolecular MicrobiologyGene ExpressionFunctional GenomicsBiologyNatural SciencesGene RegulationStrain Pcc 7120MicrobiologyMedicineNitrosative Stress
The heterocyst is a specialized cell for nitrogen fixation in the filamentous cyanobacteria, and its development is triggered by limitation of combined nitrogen in the medium. During heterocyst development, patterns of gene expression change dramatically. We identified seven genes encoding transcriptional regulators that were upregulated by nitrogen deprivation in Anabaena PCC 7120, using an Anabaena oligonucleotide microarray. Among them, the nrrA gene, which encodes a response regulator of the OmpR family with a DNA-binding domain, has shown the most prominent induction after nitrogen deprivation. Expression of nrrA increased all through the filaments within 3 h of nitrogen deprivation and became higher in proheterocysts than in vegetative cells after 12 h. Sequence analysis of the promoter region of nrrA indicated that the induction of nrrA depended on NtcA, which is the global nitrogen regulator in cyanobacteria. In the nrrA deletion mutant, heterocyst development was delayed and the induction of hetR, which is the master gene in regulation of heterocyst development, was diminished up to 24 h nitrogen deprivation. It is concluded that nrrA facilitates heterocyst development.
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