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Arginine repressor ArgR
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Symbol | Arg_repressor_C |
| Name | Arginine repressor, C-terminal domain |
| image | PDB 1xxa EBI.jpg |
| caption | c-terminal domain of escherichia coli arginine repressor/ l-arginine complex; pb derivative |
| Pfam | PF02863 |
| InterPro | IPR020899 |
| SCOP | 1aoy |
In molecular biology, the arginine repressor (ArgR) is a repressor of prokaryotic arginine deiminase pathways.
The arginine dihydrolase (AD) pathway is found in many prokaryotes and some eukaryotes, an example of the latter being Giardia lamblia (Giardia intestinalis). The three-enzyme anaerobic pathway breaks down L-arginine to form 1 mol of ATP, carbon dioxide and ammonia. In some bacteria, the first enzyme, arginine deiminase, can account for up to 10% of total cell protein.
Most prokaryotic arginine deiminase pathways are under the control of a repressor gene, termed ArgR. This is a negative regulator, and will only release the arginine deiminase operon for expression in the presence of arginine. The crystal structure of apo-ArgR from Bacillus stearothermophilus has been determined to 2.5A by means of X-ray crystallography. The protein exists as a hexamer of identical subunits, and is shown to have six DNA-binding domains, clustered around a central oligomeric core when bound to arginine. It predominantly interacts with A.T residues in ARG boxes. This hexameric protein binds DNA at its N terminus to repress arginine biosynthesis or activate arginine catabolism. Some species have several ArgR paralogs. In a neighbour-joining tree, some of these paralogous sequences show long branches and differ significantly from the well-conserved C-terminal region.
References
References
- (January 1998). "Anaerobic bacterial metabolism in the ancient eukaryote ''Giardia duodenalis''". Int. J. Parasitol..
- (May 1992). "Characterization of the arginine repressor from Salmonella typhimurium and its interactions with the carAB operator". J. Mol. Biol..
- (December 1998). "The arcABDC gene cluster, encoding the arginine deiminase pathway of Bacillus licheniformis, and its activation by the arginine repressor argR". J. Bacteriol..
- (May 1999). "Structure of the arginine repressor from Bacillus stearothermophilus". Nat. Struct. Biol..
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