Publication | Open Access
Functional Analysis of the Heat Shock Regulator HrcA of<i>Chlamydia trachomatis</i>
56
Citations
21
References
2002
Year
Transcriptional RegulationNatural SciencesVirulence FactorTranscription RegulationBacteriologyMolecular BiologyGene RegulationDna ReplicationCirce FunctionMicrobiologyMolecular MicrobiologyFunctional AnalysisGene ExpressionMedicineCirce Element
HrcA is a regulator of bacterial heat shock gene expression that binds to a cis-acting DNA element called CIRCE. It has been proposed that HrcA and CIRCE function as a repressor-operator pair. We have purified recombinant HrcA from the pathogenic bacterium Chlamydia trachomatis and have shown that it is a DNA-binding protein that functions as a negative regulator of transcription. HrcA bound specifically to the CIRCE element in a concentration-dependent manner. HrcA repressed the in vitro transcription of a chlamydial heat shock promoter, and this repression was promoter specific. HrcA-mediated repression appears to be dependent on the topological state of the promoter, as repression on a supercoiled promoter template was greater than that on a linearized template. These results provide direct support for the role of HrcA as a transcriptional repressor in bacteria. This is the first report of the in vitro reconstitution of transcriptional regulation in Chlamydia.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1