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Regulation of zinc import and export genes by zinc-responsive Zur in Streptomyces coelicolor : 방선균 Streptomyces coelicolor에서 아연의 획득과 방출을 조절하는 Zur의 전사 조절기작

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dc.contributor.advisor노정혜-
dc.contributor.author최승환-
dc.date.accessioned2017-10-27T17:12:40Z-
dc.date.available2017-10-27T17:12:40Z-
dc.date.issued2017-08-
dc.identifier.other000000145585-
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10371/137150-
dc.description학위논문 (박사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 자연과학대학 생명과학부, 2017. 8. 노정혜.-
dc.description.abstractIn various bacteria Zur (Zinc-uptake-regulator), a zinc-specific regulator of Fur family, regulates genes for zinc uptake to maintain zinc homeostasis. It has also been suggested to control zinc mobilization by regulating some ribosomal proteins. The antibiotics-producing soil bacterium Streptomyces coelicolor contains four genes for Fur family regulators, and one (named as zur) is located downstream of the znuACB operon encoding a putative zinc uptake transporter. Zinc specifically represses the level of znuA transcript by Zur. Zn-Zur also represses genes for ribosomal proteins L31 (rpmE) and L33 (rpmG) for zinc mobilization. Previous ChIP-chip analysis and expression analysis in delta-zur mutant revealed a unique target of Zur, SCO6751, which is predicted to be a zinc-exporter and the expression of which is activated by Zur. The activation mechanism of SCO6751, which later was named zitB, was investigated. The zitB over-expressing cells showed white phenotype, being defective in sporulation, and decreased intracellular zinc content. Zinc-dependent gene activation by Zur occurred in two phases: at sub-femtomolar zinc concentrations (phase I) with concomitant repression of zinc-uptake genes, and at over micromolar zinc conditions (phase II). DNase I footprinting on zitB DNA was performed with fixed amount of Zur (2.7 µM) and varying ZnSO4 from 2.5 to 10 µM. The results demonstrated that the Zur-footprint extended further upstream as zinc increased, up to -138 nt from TSS. This expansion in Zur-binding region is likely to lie behind the induction of zitB by zinc in phase II. It can be postulated that high concentrations of zinc could have caused some changes in Zur and its DNA-binding behavior. Whether high zinc induces Zur oligomerization in the absence of DNA was examined. Zur appears not to form oligomers beyond dimer by itself under high zinc condition. The physiological role of zitB upstream sequence in vivo was examined. The effectiveness of the zitB upstream region in zinc-dependent gene activation was examined in vivo by using a heterologous reporter gene (GUS). Recombinant pzitB-GUS fusion plasmids that contain the zitB regulatory region up to Zur binding motif (from +50 ~ -60 nt) or including expanded Zur-binding region (up to -228 nt) were constructed on pSET152-based integration vector. The S1 mapping of GUS transcripts demonstrated that the zitB regulatory region with the Zur-box motif only allowed only marginal gene activation, whereas the longer zitB upstream sequence enabled full activation of the reporter gene expression. A molecular model of the Zur2-DNA complex in low zinc condition was presented. As the level of zinc increases to micromolar range, oligomeric Zur binding was observed in vitro. At micromolar zinc, formation of hexameric or octameric Zur bindings were captured by EMSA with limited amount of Zur. From EMSA, the formation of super-retarded complex with higher concentration of Zur indicated the possibility of multimerization of Zur, with or without DNA conformational change, to underlie the activation mechanism of phase II. Taken together these findings reveal a novel mode of zinc-dependent gene activation and an ingenious strategy to use a single metallo-regulator to control both the uptake and export genes over a wide range of zinc concentrations.-
dc.description.tableofcontentsCHAPTER I INTRODUCTION 1
I.1. Biology of Streptomyces coelicolor 2
I.2. Bacterial Fur family Metalloregulators 4
I 2.1. Fur 4
I.2.2. Nur 6
I.2.3. Mur 8
I.2.4. Zur 10
I.3. Zur in Streptomyces coelicolor 11
I.4. Zinc homeostasis in Streptomyces coelicolor 16
I.5. Aims of this study 19
CHAPTER II MATERIALS AND METHODS 21
II.1. Bacterial strains and culture conditions 22
II.1.1 Streptomyces coelicolor 22
II.1.2. Escherichia coli 22
II.2. DNA manipulations 23
II.3. Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) 23
II.4. Construction of the zitB over-expression and zitBp::GUS with the wild type 26
II.5. RNA analysis 26
II.5.1. Preparation of RNA from S. coelicolor 26
II.5.2. Preparation of probes 27
II.5.3. S1 nuclease mapping assay 28
II.6. Overproduction and purification of S.coelicolor Zur from E.coli 28
II.7. Protein analysis 29
II.7.1. Chemical cross linking assay 29
II.7.2. Western blot analysis 30
II.8. Mobility shift assay for DNA-binding proteins 30
II.8.1. Probe preparation 30
II.8.2. DNA-protein binding reaction and detection 31
II.9. DNase I footptrinting with capillary electrophoresis 32
II.10. In vitro transcription assay 32
II.11. ChIP-sequencing analysis 33
II.12. ICP-MS analysis of metals 34
II.13. Modeling ScZur/DNA complexes 34
CHAPTER III RESULTS 36
III.1. Zur is an abundant protein with extensive binding sites in the genome of S. coelicolor 37
III.1.1. Confirmation of the amount of Zur protein in the cell under varying zinc concentration 37
III.1.2. Zur-binding peaks throughout the whole genome from ChIP-chip analysis 37
III.1.3. Determination of Zur binding motif 39
III 2. SCO6751 (zitB) encoding a putative zinc efflux pump is positively regulated by Zur 39
III.2.1 The zinc-specific and Zur-dependent induction of the zitB gene 39
III.2.2. Overexpression of zitB hinders differentiation and causes a decrease in the content of Zn as well as Fe, Co, and Ni 43
III.2.3. The zitB expression is activated by Zur in a biphasic manner 48
III.2.4. The transcriptional start site for zitB promoter and prediction of the -10 and -35 region 53
III.2.5. Location of Zur binding in the zitB promoter by footprinting 53
III.2.6. Zur binds with similar affinities to the core Zur-box DNAs of zitB and znuA genes 53
III.2.7. Increase in Zn causes oligomeric Zur binding with extended footprints 54
III.2.8. Zinc-dependent formation of multimeric Zur-zitB DNA complexes in vitro and the contribution of Zur-box upstream region on zitB activation in vivo 65
III.2.9. Confirmation of zinc-dependent zitB activation via upstream sequences in vivo and in vitro 68
III.3. ZitB orthologues in other bacteria 78
III.3.1. The ZitB orthologue in Mycobacterium smegmatis and Corynebacterium glutamicum 78
III.3.2. EMSA assay with S.coelicolor Zur and confirmation of RNA expression 83

III.4. Finding new Zur target genes & classification of the zinc-responsive genes 83
III.4.1 Zur ChIP-sequencing analysis 83
III.4.2. RNA sequencing analysis 87
III.5. Classification of the genes induced by metal depletion 87
III.6. A comparison between ChIP-chip and ChIP-sequencing 102
III.6.1. Possibility that Zur is nucleoid associated protein (NAP) through HU, H-NS and IHF comparison 102
III.6.2. A comparison between ChIP-chip and ChIP-sequencing 103
CHAPTER IV DISCUSSION 105
REFERENCES 114
국문초록
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dc.formatapplication/pdf-
dc.format.extent4352860 bytes-
dc.format.mediumapplication/pdf-
dc.language.isoen-
dc.publisher서울대학교 대학원-
dc.subjectStreptomyces coelicolor-
dc.subjectFur family-
dc.subjectZur-
dc.subjectzinc homeostasis-
dc.subjectznuA-
dc.subjectzincexporter-
dc.subjectzitB-
dc.subjectactivation mechanism-
dc.subjectmechanism structure model-
dc.subject.ddc570-
dc.titleRegulation of zinc import and export genes by zinc-responsive Zur in Streptomyces coelicolor-
dc.title.alternative방선균 Streptomyces coelicolor에서 아연의 획득과 방출을 조절하는 Zur의 전사 조절기작-
dc.typeThesis-
dc.contributor.AlternativeAuthorSeung-Hwan Choi-
dc.description.degreeDoctor-
dc.contributor.affiliation자연과학대학 생명과학부-
dc.date.awarded2017-08-
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