Publication | Open Access
<scp>F</scp>is<scp>R</scp> activates σ<sup>54</sup>‐dependent transcription of sulfide‐oxidizing genes in <scp><i>C</i></scp><i>upriavidus pinatubonensis</i><scp>JMP</scp>134
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Citations
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References
2017
Year
Some heterotrophic bacteria are able to oxidize sulfide (H<sub>2</sub> S, HS<sup>-</sup> and S<sup>2-</sup> ) to sulfite and thiosulfate via polysulfide. The genes coding for the oxidation enzymes in Cupriavidus pinatubonensis JMP134 have recently been identified; however, their regulation is unknown. A regulator gene is adjacent to the operon of the sulfide-oxidizing genes, encoding a σ<sup>54</sup> -dependent transcription factor (FisR) with three domains: an R domain, an AAA+ domain and a DNA-binding domain. Here it is reported that the regulator responds to the presence of sulfide and activates the sulfide-oxidizing genes. FisR binds to its cognate operator at -114 to -135 bp of the transcription start of the operon. When polysulfide reacts with the R domain of FisR through the three conserved cysteine residues (C53, C64 and C71), FisR activates the expression of the operon. FisR is highly sensitive to polysulfide, activating σ<sup>54</sup> -dependent transcription of sulfide-oxidizing genes for sulfide removal. Further, sequence analysis indicates that FisR-type regulators are relatively common for controlling sulfide-oxidizing genes under sulfide stress in the Proteobacteria.
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