Identification of pilR, which encodes a transcriptional activator of the Pseudomonas aeruginosa pilin gene.

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RESUMO

Two regulatory mutants of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, R1 and RA, that affect transcription of the pilin gene were isolated. This was done by introducing a plasmid carrying a fusion of the pilin gene's promoter with the lacZ gene into a bank of P. aeruginosa DNA mutagenized with the transposon Tn5G. The block in pilin expression in these mutants was shown to be at the level of transcription, since these mutants did not synthesize either pilin mRNA or pilin antigen. A restriction fragment derived from the R1 mutant that contains the entire transposon plus flanking chromosomal DNA was cloned and used as a probe to screen a cosmid library of P. aeruginosa DNA. Cosmids that could complement the pilin expression defect in both R1 and RA were isolated. The gene inactivated in R1 was sequenced. This gene, designated pilR, encodes an approximately 50-kDa polypeptide which exhibits significant similarity to the NtrC family of response regulators of the two-component regulatory system. PilR contains the amino-terminal aspartic acid residues which are conserved among the response regulators, suggesting that pilin gene transcription is regulated via a phosphotransfer mechanism in which PilR is phosphorylated by an as yet unidentified protein kinase.

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