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Journal of Bacteriology, February 2004, p . 601-610, Vol . 186,
No . 3
The
NifL-NifA System: a Multidomain Transcriptional Regulatory Complex That
Integrates Environmental Signals
Isabel Martinez-Argudo, Richard Little, Neil Shearer, Philip Johnson,
and Ray Dixon*
Department of Molecular Microbiology, John Innes Centre, Norwich NR4 7UH,
United Kingdom
The ability of bacteria to respond to a multitude of environmental
signals and integrate these signals to trigger adaptive responses
provides a successful strategy for survival in rapidly changing
environments . In many cases integration can be achieved via the
interlinking of different regulatory circuits in which various master
regulators respond to different environmental cues . However, in some
systems an economy of scale can be achieved if individual regulatory
proteins are able to respond to more than one input signal . In this
review we consider a particular example where multiple signals are
integrated by a regulatory protein complex to finely tune
transcriptional regulation of nitrogen fixation in free-living
diazotrophic bacteria .
The ability to fix atmospheric nitrogen to ammonia by using the
enzyme nitrogenase enables diazotrophs not only to survive but also
to proliferate under conditions of extreme fixed-nitrogen
deprivation . This strategy, however, incurs an energetic penalty
since nitrogenase consumes 16 mol of ATP per mol of dinitrogen fixed
in vitro, and the energy cost increases to up to 40 mol of ATP per
mol in vivo (44) . The irreversible inactivation of
nitrogenase by oxygen also imposes physiological constraints on
diazotrophs such that they may only be able to utilize the enzyme
under anaerobic conditions or, alternatively, they may employ elegant
physiological strategies to protect the enzyme from damage by oxygen
under aerobic conditions . In addition to its oxygen sensitivity,
nitrogenase is a kinetically slow enzyme (97) .
Growth in the absence of fixed nitrogen requires a high concentration
of the enzyme, and some diazotrophs accumulate 10 to 20% of the total
cell protein as nitrogenase under nitrogen-fixing conditions .
Nitrogen fixation thus provides an opportunistic strategy to colonize
nitrogen-deficient environments, but the cellular commitment in terms
of protein synthesis and ATP consumption is appropriate only under
specific environmental conditions . The oxygen concentration and the
availability of fixed nitrogen are therefore important factors in the
regulation of nitrogenase biosynthesis . These signals are integrated
to provide transcriptional control of nif gene expression in
free-living diazotrophs .
In diazotrophic representatives of the Proteobacteria, nif gene
transcription is mostly dependent on the alternative sigma factor
54,
which recognizes promoters with consensus sequences located at
positions -24 and -12 (9, 16) .
Transcription initiation by the
54-RNA
polymerase holoenzyme requires a specific class of transcriptional
activator, which binds to enhancer-like elements upstream of
54-dependent
promoters and through ATP hydrolysis catalyzes conformational changes
in
54
which enable the holoenzyme to undergo the transition to the
transcriptionally competent open promoter complex.
54-dependent
activators, which are also known as enhancer binding proteins (EBPs)
(72, 95), belong to the AAA+
superfamily of ATPases that transform energy into mechanical function
to remodel their substrates (75, 103) .
Activation of
54-dependent
nif gene transcription requires NifA, a conserved EBP that
regulates genes necessary for the synthesis of molybdenum nitrogenase
in proteobacteria .
Activation of transcription by NifA is regulated in response to
oxygen and fixed nitrogen . In many diazotrophic members of the alpha
and beta subgroups of the Proteobacteria, NifA activity is
apparently directly responsive to the oxygen status, and conserved
cysteine residues have been implicated in the response (32,
33) . There is also evidence that the activity of these
NifA proteins is regulated in response to fixed nitrogen . However,
in some nitrogen-fixing organisms, particularly members of the
gamma subgroup of the Proteobacteria, the activity of NifA is
not intrinsically oxygen or nitrogen responsive, and a partner
protein, NifL, is required to modulate NifA activity directly in
response to oxygen and fixed nitrogen (24, 89) .
Initial sequencing of the nifL-nifA operon suggested that these
genes could encode a two-component regulatory system . Although
NifA does not contain an archetypal response regulator receiver-like
domain, the C-terminal region of NifL shows homology to the histidine
protein kinases (HPKs) (12, 26) . Moreover,
Azotobacter vinelandii NifL contains a conserved histidine
residue found in the transmitter domains of histidine kinases,
suggesting that this NifL might employ a classical phosphoryl
transfer mechanism to communicate environmental signals to NifA .
However, replacement of this conserved histidine by a number of other
amino acids does not disable signal transduction (101) .
Furthermore, NifL is competent to inhibit NifA in vitro in the
absence of ATP, and signal transduction requires stoichiometric
protein-protein interactions between the two regulatory proteins (6,
43, 57, 69,
87) . Current evidence suggests that NifL controls the
activity of NifA by a relatively stable protein-protein interaction
that is modulated by redox changes, ligand binding, and interactions
with other signal transduction proteins and membrane components .
NifL homologues are found in various enterobacteria, including
Klebsiella pneumoniae (51), Klebsiella oxytoca (53),
and Pantoea agglomerans (92), and in the
aerobic diazotrophs A . vinelandii (12,
81) and Pseudomonas stutzeri (23) .
Database searches have suggested that the NifL-NifA system is also
present in the plant pathogen Erwinia chrysanthemi and in the
methane-oxidizing bacterium Methylococcus capsulatus strain
Bath . A NifL-NifA system has also been reported in Azoarcus
sp . strain BH72, a diazotrophic grass endophyte belonging to the beta
subgroup of the Proteobacteria (29) . A
sequence (PY07698) encoding a NifL-NifA fusion protein in the genome
of the rodent malaria parasite Plasmodium yoelii yoelii (18)
is probably an artifact due to contamination with Methylococcus
DNA sequences . In this review we focus on the NifL-NifA systems of
K . pneumoniae and A . vinelandii, which are the most
well-studied systems and provide examples of sophisticated
multidomain signaling interactions that are responsive to environmental
cues . The NifL and NifA proteins of K . pneumoniae are designated
Kp NifL and Kp NifA, respectively, and the NifL and NifA proteins
of A . vinelandii are designated Av NifL and Av NifA, respectively .
DOMAIN STRUCTURES Av NifL contains at least three discrete
domains . The N-terminal region has a sensing function, and the C
terminus exhibits homology to transmitter domains of the HPKs .
Separating these regions is a glutamine-rich hydrophilic sequence
representing a Q linker (102) . Kp NifL has a
domain structure that is more difficult to define, but it also has an
N-terminal sensory region and a C-terminal region required for signal
transmission . The domain annotation for Av NifL and Kp NifL is shown
in Fig . 1 . One or more PAS domains are found in the
N-terminal region (104) . Although limited
homology has been observed among PAS domains at the sequence level,
structural studies have demonstrated that various cofactors,
including heme, flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD), flavin
mononucleotide, and 4-hydroxycinnamic acid, are retained by a common
/ß
fold (96) . The NifL sequences of aerobic
diazotrophs (e.g., A . vinelandii) possess two PAS domains, which
we designate PAS1 and PAS2, whereas the NifL sequences of bacteria
which fix nitrogen under anaerobic conditions (e.g., K . pneumoniae)
have only a single PAS domain, PAS1 (Fig . 1) . The PAS1
domains of both Kp NifL and Av NifL have been shown to contain FAD as
a prosthetic group (45, 88) and are
required for the redox-sensing functions of these proteins, as
discussed below . Like wild-type Av NifL, the isolated PAS1 domain is
tetrameric and contains
1
mol of FAD per monomer (40-42) . However,
the function of the Av NifL PAS2 domain is unknown . Truncated
derivatives of Av NifL lacking the PAS1 domain are not responsive to
the redox status but are competent to signal the response to fixed
nitrogen, demonstrating that redox and nitrogen sensing are discrete
functions of the protein (Table 1) (93) .
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FIG . 1 . Graphic view of the domain structure of Av NifL (NIFL_AZOVI) and
Kp NifL (NIFL_KLEPN) from the INTERPRO server (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/interpro/) .
INTERPRO assignments and database cross-references are indicated on the
left, and the corresponding domains are indicated on the right . Domain
designations used in this paper are above the diagram . PAS domains are
subdivided into PAS and PAC motifs in some databases (78),
but both of these motifs form an integral part of a single structural
domain . The term PAS domain in this paper refers to the single
structural fold that encompasses both the PAS and PAC motifs.
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| TABLE 1 . Properties of truncated derivatives of Av NifL
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As noted above, the sequence of Av NifL suggested homology to the
transmitter domains of members of the HPK family . Structural studies
of representatives of the HPK family have revealed a C-terminal
catalytic domain, required for ATP binding and trans
phosphorylation, and a dimerization domain (H domain) containing the
conserved histidine residue required for phosphotransfer to the
response regulator (94) . The catalytic kinase domain
belongs to the GHKL (HATPase_c) superfamily of ATPases, which
includes DNA gyrase B, Hsp90, SpoIIAB, and MutL (27) . Av NifL
contains conserved residues corresponding to the N, G1, F, and
G2 boxes that constitute the ATP binding domain of the GHKL
superfamily, and this domain of Av NifL has been demonstrated to bind
adenosine nucleotides (93) (see below) . However, the
corresponding region of Kp NifL is less homologous to the GHKL
superfamily and apparently does not bind nucleotides (56) .
Structural predictions also indicate that the region of Av NifL
located between the PAS2 and GHKL domains may constitute an
antiparallel helix bundle, similar to the structures of the
dimerization (H) domains of the HPKs EnvZ and CheA .
The domain architecture of diazotrophic NifA proteins is more
uniform than that of NifL proteins . The N-terminal region of NifA
proteins constitutes a GAF domain, a ubiquitous sensory module found
in signaling proteins in all phyla (1) . GAF domains
have a three-dimensional structure similar to that of PAS domains (47)
and are known to bind small molecules, including cyclic nucleotides (50)
and formate (48) . Truncated NifA proteins lacking
the N-terminal GAF domain have altered regulatory properties and, in
the case of Av NifA and Kp NifA, have altered responses to NifL (8,
25) . The central domain of NifA proteins is highly
conserved and comprises the AAA+ module required for nucleotide
hydrolysis and
54
interaction that is common to all EBPs (72,
95) . AAA+ proteins are oligomeric and commonly form a
hexameric ring-like structure in which nucleotide is bound between
adjacent protomers (99) . Oligomerization of EBPs
promotes ATP hydrolysis, which in turn couples changes in protomer
structure to binding interactions with
54
(17, 19, 103) . A
conserved GAFTGA motif in the AAA+ domain that is unique to EBPs is
critical for transcriptional activation (100) .
This region constitutes an interaction surface that binds
54
and couples the energy of ATP hydrolysis to open complex formation (15) .
As is the case for all EBPs, the C-terminal domain of NifA contains a
helix-turn-helix motif required for recognition of the enhancer-like,
upstream activator sequences (70) . Mutations in
the recognition helix of Kp NifA that influence transcriptional
activation occur at residues that exhibit chemical shifts in the
nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of the C-terminal domain upon DNA
binding, directly demonstrating that the helix-turn-helix motif
interacts with the enhancer-like sequences (82) .
LIGAND BINDING AND THE NifL-NifA INTERACTION Since NifL
proteins have a domain structure similar to that of the HPKs, it was
expected that these proteins might bind adenosine nucleotides . Av
NifL apparently does not hydrolyze ATP, exhibit autophosphorylation,
or phosphotransfer to NifA . However, the C-terminal GHKL domain of Av
NifL binds ATP and ADP (93) . The binding of these
nucleotides influences the conformation of the C-terminal region,
which is particularly susceptible to trypsin cleavage in the absence
of nucleotide . The affinity of Av NifL for ADP (apparent Kd,
13
µM) is approximately 10-fold higher than that of ATP (93) .
The presence of ADP also influences the activity of NifL in vitro,
strongly stimulating the ability of Av NifL to inhibit the activity
of Av NifA (31, 45) . The
ability of ADP to act as an effector of NifL activity is reflected by
the increased stability of the protein complexes formed between Av
NifL and Av NifA in the presence of this ligand (69) .
Removal of the nucleotide causes dissociation of the complex . Neither
the N-terminal region of Av NifL (69) nor the GAF domain
of Av NifA (8, 58) is essential for
the interaction . Protein footprinting experiments indicate that
complex formation alters the protease sensitivity of the Q linker
region in Av NifL and the GAF domain and linker region between the
GAF and AAA+ domains of Av NifA (68) . Overall,
these experiments suggest that the binding of adenosine nucleotides
to the GHKL domain of Av NifL influences the conformation of the
transmitter region and facilitates interaction with Av NifA .
Expression of K . pneumoniae nifL and nifA genes is coupled at
the translational level, and immunoprecipitation experiments
have demonstrated that Kp NifL and Kp NifA form a protein-protein
complex in vivo (34, 35, 43) .
However, the requirements for complex formation appear to be
different from those of the A . vinelandii NifL-NifA system
(Table 2) . As mentioned above, the C-terminal
region of Kp NifL is less homologous to the HPKs than Av NifL is, and
it lacks conserved residues required for nucleotide binding in the
GHKL superfamily . In contrast to Av NifL, the presence of adenosine
nucleotides is not specifically required for the inhibition of Kp
NifA activity by Kp NifL (57) . Although neither
ATP hydrolysis (10) nor kinase activities (87)
have been reported previously, Kp NifL has recently been shown
to exhibit ATP binding and ATPase activity when it is purified from
cultures grown under conditions of nitrogen sufficiency (56) .
In contrast, Kp NifL purified from cultures grown under conditions of
nitrogen deficiency is catalytically inactive . Although both of these
forms are competent to inhibit Kp NifA in vitro, an increase in
inhibitory activity is observed in the presence of adenosine
nucleotides . Surprisingly however, nucleotide binding to Kp NifL is
apparently associated with the PAS1 domain and not with the
C-terminal GKHL-like domain (56) . The sequences
required for the interaction between Kp NifL and Kp NifA also appear
to be different than the sequences required in the A . vinelandii
NifL-NifA system . Unlike the isolated C-terminal kinase-like domain
of Av NifL, the C-terminal domain of Kp NifL is sufficient to inhibit
Kp NifA both in vivo and in vitro (74) (Table
2) .
| TABLE 2 . Properties of truncated derivatives of Kp NifL
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Although the response of Av NifL to adenosine nucleotides might
provide a mechanism for sensing the energy charge, the physiological
relevance of nucleotide binding is unclear, since the intracellular
concentrations of ATP and ADP are far greater than the association
constants of Av NifL for these nucleotides . Potentially, the affinity
of Av NifL for nucleotides could be altered in response to
environmental cues, as postulated for Kp NifL (56) .
Alternatively, other ligands may influence the NifL-NifA interaction .
It has recently been shown that 2-oxoglutarate is an allosteric
effector of the A . vinelandii NifL-NifA system that
counteracts the inhibitory function of the ADP-bound form of Av NifL
(63) . 2-Oxoglutarate has been implicated as a key
metabolic signal of the carbon status, but the concentration of this
metabolite also reflects the nitrogen status . The response of the
A . vinelandii NifL-NifA system to 2-oxoglutarate in vitro is
within the physiological range, which extends from
100
µM under conditions of carbon limitation (excess of fixed nitrogen)
to
1
mM under conditions of nitrogen deficiency (excess of carbon) (85,
90) . Thus, at relatively low 2-oxoglutarate
concentrations, the ADP-bound form of NifL is competent to inhibit
NifA activity, but at high 2-oxoglutarate levels, NifA is not
responsive to NifL in the presence of ADP (63) .
Isothermal titration calorimetry experiments have demonstrated that
2-oxoglutarate binds to Av NifA but not to Av NifL (61) .
The GAF domain of Av NifA exhibits stoichiometric binding of
2-oxoglutarate with a dissociation constant of 60 µM, and binding is
not observed with a truncated form of Av NifA lacking the GAF domain .
The interaction of 2-oxoglutarate with the GAF domain may induce
conformational changes in Av NifA which render it resistant to Av
NifL, since the binding of 2-oxoglutarate alters the susceptibility
of this domain to digestion with trypsin (61) . In
contrast, the GAF domain of K . pneumoniae NifA apparently does
not bind 2-oxoglutarate, emphasizing the mechanistic differences
between the A . vinelandii and K . pneumoniae NifL-NifA
systems .
NITROGEN REGULATION Nitrogen fixation is essential for
growth only under conditions of fixed-nitrogen deficiency, and thus
the activity of NifA is stringently controlled by NifL in response to
the fixed-nitrogen status . Key information related to the
intracellular nitrogen and the carbon status is communicated by the
signal transduction protein PII, which integrates these signals and
transmits the information globally to various receptors to control
nitrogen assimilation (in this case the NifL-NifA system) . PII-like
proteins constitute a highly conserved family of signaling proteins
found in all three kingdoms of life (2,
76) . Many bacteria possess more than one PII-like
protein; these proteins have common functions but perform discrete
physiological roles . Enteric bacteria express two PII paralogues,
designated GlnB and GlnK, that are both subject to reversible
covalent modification by the uridylyltransferase/uridylyl-removing
enzyme, the product of glnD (2) . The activity of this
enzyme is regulated by the intracellular level of glutamine, a key
signal of the nitrogen status . Under conditions of nitrogen
deprivation, when the intracellular level of glutamine is relatively
low, GlnD uridylylates the PII proteins . Conversely, at high
glutamine concentrations, the PII proteins are deuridylylated by
GlnD . The site of covalent modification is a conserved tyrosine
residue (Tyr 51) which is located at the tip of a surface-exposed
loop (the T loop) required for the interaction of PII proteins with
their receptors . The activity of PII is controlled not only by
covalent modification but also by the binding of the ligands ATP and
2-oxoglutarate (76) . As with Av NifA, the interaction
with 2-oxoglutarate enables PII proteins to respond allosterically
to a signal of central carbon metabolism . PII proteins are trimeric
and contain three binding sites for 2-oxoglutarate and ATP .
The primary physiological role of GlnB in enteric bacteria is to
control nitrogen assimilation under conditions of relative nitrogen
sufficiency, whereas GlnK mediates nitrogen control under conditions
of nitrogen starvation (5, 13) . This
enables nitrogen regulatory cascades in which the PII paralogues
operate at different levels . Such a cascade mediates nitrogen
regulation of nitrogen fixation in K . pneumoniae . By
modulating the activity of the NtrB-NtrC two-component regulatory
system, GlnB controls the phosphorylation state of the EBP, NtrC, a
key activator of nitrogen-regulated genes . This first level of the
cascade ensures that activation of the glnK and nifLA
promoters is determined by the phosphorylation state of NtrC . Both of
these promoters possess relatively weak enhancers, and a high level
of NtrC-P is required for their activation (5,
67) . The first level of nitrogen control,
therefore, governs the expression of NifL, NifA, and GlnK, the major
players at the second level of the cascade (39)
(Fig . 2) . Although glnB mutations influence the
first step of the cascade by altering the level of NtrC-P, they
do not influence the fixed-nitrogen response of the Kp NifL and Kp
NifA proteins per se, which occurs at the second level of the
cascade . However, in glnK mutants, Kp NifA activity is
constitutively inactivated by Kp NifL, indicating that in the second
step of the cascade, GlnK is required to prevent Kp NifL from
inhibiting Kp NifA under conditions of nitrogen starvation (38,
49) . Although there is no biochemical evidence, these results
suggest that GlnK could bind to either Kp NifL or Kp NifA to
prevent interaction between the partners under nitrogen-limiting
conditions (Fig . 2) . The ability of GlnK to relieve inhibition
by Kp NifL under conditions of nitrogen starvation does not
require covalent modification of GlnK, since normal regulation by
NifL is observed in glnD mutants and with a mutant form of
GlnK, GlnK-Y51N, which cannot be uridylylated by GlnD (28,
38) . The specificity of the interaction between
GlnK and the K . pneumoniae nif-specific regulatory proteins
has been investigated by comparing the T-loop regions of
Escherichia coli GlnB and GlnK . Substitution of residues 43 and
54 of GlnB by the analogous residues in GlnK enables GlnB to relieve
NifL inhibition of Kp NifA (3) . Expression of GlnB
on a multicopy plasmid also relieves NifL inhibition (4),
which is congruent with the finding that specific physiological roles
played by GlnB and GlnK are dependent upon expression levels rather
than discrete functions (13) .
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FIG . 2 . Cascade regulation of nif genes in K . pneumoniae
in response to the fixed nitrogen status . Under nitrogen-limiting
conditions, GlnB is uridylylated and NtrB phosphorylates NtrC, leading
to activation of transcription of the glnK, amtB, and
nifLA operons . Expression of GlnK prevents Kp NifL from inhibiting
Kp NifA, leading to activation of nif transcription . Under
nitrogen-sufficient conditions, GlnD deuridylylates GlnB, which is then
competent to activate the phosphatase activity of NtrB; this limits the
availability of NtrC-P and prevents expression of nifLA and
glnK amtB . Following ammonium upshift GlnK may be sequestered by
AmtB, as discussed in the text.
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In A . vinelandii similar components required for nitrogen regulation
are present, but the cascade appears to have become disconnected
and the mechanism of regulation is somewhat different . Although
this organism possesses a bona fide NtrB-NtrC two-component
regulatory system which regulates nitrate assimilation, NtrC is not
required to activate transcription from the nifLA promoter (98) .
This promoter is active under conditions of nitrogen excess and,
surprisingly, is not dependent on rpoN even though there is a
potential
54
interaction site appropriately positioned upstream of the
transcription start site (12, 81) . Another
unusual feature of A . vinelandii is the presence of only a
single gene encoding a PII-like protein, designated glnK,
which is located in an operon with amtB and is transcribed
constitutively (20, 65) .
Therefore, both the nifLA and glnK amtB operons are transcribed
under conditions of nitrogen sufficiency, and thus the first
level of the nitrogen regulatory cascade present in enteric bacteria
is absent in A . vinelandii . The glnK gene is apparently
essential in A . vinelandii (65), and GlnK is
uridylylated by a homologue of GlnD previously known as NfrX (20) .
Mutants with mutations in glnD which decrease
uridylyltransferase activity are unable to fix nitrogen . However, the
Nif- phenotype of these strains can be suppressed by
secondary mutations that inactivate NifL (20,
21) . This suggests that the uridylylation function
of GlnD is necessary to prevent Av NifL from inhibiting Av NifA in
A . vinelandii, in contrast to enteric bacteria, in which
uridylylation of GlnK is not required . Since A . vinelandii glnK
is an essential gene, it has not been possible to examine the
phenotype of strains with glnK null mutations . However, a strain
expressing a mutant form of GlnK with a mutation in the T loop,
GlnK-Y51F, which prevents uridylylation by GlnD, is stable providing
that the strain contains a secondary mutation (gln-71) that
also prevents the adenylylation of glutamine synthetase (86) .
The secondary mutation is necessary because the nonuridylylated
form of GlnK results in constitutive adenylylation of glutamine
synthetase, thus preventing ammonia assimilation (20) .
Strains containing the glnK-Y51F and gln-71 mutations
are impaired for nitrogen fixation, and Av NifA is inactivated by Av
NifL even under nitrogen-fixing conditions . As is the case for the
glnD mutations, this phenotype is suppressed by insertion
mutations in nifL (86) . Thus, uridylylation
of GlnK is necessary in order to prevent inhibition by Av NifL under
conditions of fixed-nitrogen deficiency .
The A . vinelandii nifLA system responds to nitrogen regulation
when it is introduced into E . coli (93), which
allows comparisons between the responses of the K . pneumoniae
and A . vinelandi NifL-NifA systems to well-characterized
nitrogen-regulatory mutations . In contrast to the response of the
K . pneumoniae system in E . coli, neither GlnK nor GlnB is
required to relieve inhibition by Av NifL under nitrogen-limiting
conditions . Moreover, in double glnB ntrC mutants or in triple
glnB glnK ntrC mutants, which do not express the PII proteins,
the activity of Av NifA is not regulated by Av NifL in response to
the nitrogen source (85) . This suggests that in
contrast to the K . pneumoniae NifL-NifA system, the PII
proteins are required to activate the inhibitory function of Av NifL
rather than prevent inhibition (Fig . 3) . This
conclusion is strongly supported by the results of biochemical
experiments performed with purified components . The inhibitory
function of Av NifL is activated by the nonuridylylated form of E .
coli GlnB but not by the fully uridylylated form (GlnB-UMP) (63) .
Likewise, the nonmodified form of A . vinelandii GlnK (Av GlnK)
is competent to activate the inhibitory function of Av NifL in the
presence of 2-oxoglutarate and ATP . However, when fully uridylylyated
by the A . vinelandii GlnD protein, Av GlnK does not activate
Av NifL (63) . This is fully consistent with the in
vivo data and demonstrates that covalent modification of Av GlnK by
GlnD is necessary to prevent Av GlnK from activating the inhibitory
function of Av NifL .
|
FIG . 3 . Nitrogen source regulation of nif gene transcription in
A . vinelandii . Under conditions of fixed-nitrogen limitation
(-N), GlnK is mainly uridylylated and not competent to interact with
NifL . Under these conditions, binding of 2-oxoglutarate to the GAF
domain of Av NifA relieves inhibition by Av NifL, freeing NifA to
activate transcription . Under conditions of fixed-nitrogen sufficiency
(+N), GlnD deuridylylates GlnK, which interacts with NifL, promoting
formation of the NifL-NifA complex.
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Potentially, Av GlnK could interact with either Av NifL or Av NifA to
modulate their activities . Interactions between Av GlnK and Av NifL,
but not between Av GlnK and Av NifA, have been detected by coaffinity
assays, surface plasmon resonance experiments, and yeast two-hybrid
assays (13, 86) . The in vitro interaction
of Av GlnK with Av NifL is abolished by a mutation, E44C, in
the T loop of GlnK and also, as expected, when Av GlnK is fully
uridylylated . Similar to the interactions of the E . coli PII
proteins with their receptors, the binary interaction is dependent
upon Mg2+, ATP, and 2-oxoglutarate (60) . The role
of Av GlnK in communicating the nitrogen status to Av NifL may be
analogous to the role of E . coli GlnB in signaling to the
histidine kinase NtrB, since in both cases the interactions have been
localized to the C-terminal GHKL domain of the receptors (60,
77) . However, the response of the interaction to
2-oxoglutarate appears to be different in each case . This ligand is
an allosteric effector of the E . coli GlnB-NtrB interaction
but not the Av GlnK-Av NifL interaction (60) . This
difference may arise from the discrete ligand binding properties of
E . coli GlnB and Av GlnK . As mentioned above, GlnB binds a
single molecule of 2-oxoglutarate with high affinity, and the binding
of subsequent molecules is inhibited by anticooperativity . However,
isothermal titration calorimetry experiments have suggested that
unlike E . coli GlnB, Av GlnK does not exhibit negative
cooperativity in the binding of 2-oxoglutarate (60) .
The involvement of 2-oxoglutarate in the Av GlnK-Av NifL interaction
is also complicated by the binding of this ligand to the GAF domain
of Av NifA . Protease footprinting experiments have suggested that the
interaction with Av GlnK promotes the formation of a GlnK-NifL-NifA
ternary complex (61) . Whereas the binding of
2-oxoglutarate to the GAF domain of NifA appears to favor
dissociation of the binary A . vinelandii NifL-NifA complex,
the presence of nonmodified GlnK favors the ternary interaction, even
at high 2-oxoglutarate concentrations .
The mechanism by which GlnK communicates the nitrogen status to
the A . vinelandii NifL-NifA system is thus clearly very different
from that observed in K . pneumoniae . In A . vinelandii, Av
GlnK is required to activate the inhibitory function of Av NifL,
whereas in K . pneumoniae GlnK is required to prevent Kp NifL
from inhibiting Kp NifA . K . pneumoniae GlnK could interact either
with Kp NifL or Kp NifA to promote dissociation of the complex .
In contrast, the nonmodified form of Av GlnK promotes association of
a ternary complex . Covalent modification of Av GlnK by GlnD modulates
the interaction with Av NifL in response to the N status, whereas in
K . pneumoniae the signal for nitrogen starvation is provided
by activation of glnK expression by NtrC-P, and modification
of GlnK is not required to transmit the signal (compare Fig.
2 and 3) .
REDOX-OXYGEN SENSING The need to reconcile the oxygen
sensitivity of nitrogenase with strictly aerobic metabolism in A .
vinelandii has necessitated the evolution of various protection
mechanisms to ensure that nitrogenase is not damaged by oxygen (44,
73, 79) . However, when
respiration is unable to cope with excess oxygen, it is necessary to
ensure that synthesis of nitrogenase is prevented . Likewise in K .
pneumoniae, which is capable of fixing nitrogen only under
anaerobic conditions, it is important to prevent nif
transcription in response to aerobiosis . It is well established that
NifL inhibits NifA in response to the external oxygen concentration,
but the first clue to a potential mechanism for redox sensing was the
demonstration that Av NifL is a flavoprotein with FAD as a prosthetic
group (45) . Spectroscopy of purified Av NifL
revealed a characteristic flavin spectrum with absorption maxima at
360 and 445 nm and shoulders at 420 and 470 nm indicative of a
protein-bound flavin moiety . While the oxidized form of Av NifL is
competent to inhibit transcriptional activation by Av NifA, this
inhibition is reversed when the flavin is reduced with sodium
dithionite (45) . These observations demonstrate
that Av NifL is a redox-sensitive regulatory protein . Av NifL binds
FAD in the N-terminal PAS1 domain, which has sequence similarity with
the corresponding PAS domain in the E . coli flavoprotein Aer,
a signal transducer for aerotaxis (11, 83) .
The N terminus of Kp NifL also contains bound FAD (88),
although in this case redox-mediated control of NifA activity has not
been demonstrated in vitro, as truncated forms of NifL lacking
the N-terminal domain inhibit NifA activity . However, the biochemical
experiments to date with the K . pneumoniae system have not included
GlnK, which may be required to promote dissociation of Kp NifL
and Kp NifA under reducing conditions .
The FAD moiety in Av NifL can be reduced with a variety of enzymes
as electron donors in a two-electron reduction with a redox potential
of
225
mV at pH 8 (64) . Oxygen is a potential physiological
oxidant as Av NifL is rapidly oxidized upon exposure to air,
which yields hydrogen peroxide as a product (62) . However,
the physiological electron donor to Av NifL in A . vinelandii
is unknown . The redox potential of the reduced FAD-oxidized FAD
couple in Kp NifL is
275
mV at pH 8, and the reduced form of the protein also oxidizes rapidly
in the presence of air (55) . Although there is no
evidence that Kp NifL contains Fe or an iron-sulfur cluster, iron is
required in the culture medium to prevent Kp NifL from inhibiting Kp
NifA even under anaerobic, nitrogen-limiting conditions (87) .
This suggests that an iron-containing protein could be required to
signal the redox status to NifL by acting as an electron donor . One
candidate iron-containing protein that acts as a general oxygen
sensor is the global regulator Fnr, which contains an oxygen-labile
[4Fe-4S] cluster (52) . Analysis of the K .
pneumoniae NifL-NifA system in fnr mutants of E . coli
and K . pneumoniae indicated that Fnr is required to maintain
Kp NifL in a noninhibitory state under anaerobic, nitrogen-limiting
conditions (36) . Since Fnr is unlikely to be a
direct electron donor to Kp NifL, the physiological electron donor is
likely to be an electron transport component encoded by a gene(s)
that is subject to transcriptional activation by Fnr under anaerobic
conditions . K . pneumoniae strains having mutations in either
fdnG (encoding formate dehydrogenase N) or nuoCD
(encoding NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase) show reduced nif
gene activation, but the mutations do not influence the expression
levels of Kp NifL and Kp NifA (37) . This suggests
that in the absence of these membrane-bound oxidoreductases, NifL is
maintained in an inhibitory form under anaerobic conditions, although
it is not obvious why both mutations apparently influence electron
donation to Kp NifL . The fdn operon is subject to Fnr control
in E . coli (59), whereas the nuo operon is
regulated by ArcA (14) . It will therefore be of
interest to determine whether Fnr is involved in regulation of the
corresponding K . pneumoniae operons . It has been proposed that
Kp NifL is reduced by electrons from the reduced quinone pool since
the quinone derivatives dimethyl naphthoquinol and menadiol are able
to reduce the flavin moiety of Kp NifL in the absence of an electron
mediator in vitro (37) .
DYNAMIC LOCALIZATION Translational coupling of the nifLA
operon in K . pneumoniae ensures that the two encoded proteins
are produced in stoichiometric amounts (34) .
Alterations in the ratio of Kp NifL to Kp NifA disrupt bona fide
regulation, demonstrating that the stoichiometry is important for
effective signal transduction (35) . Under anaerobic
nitrogen-limiting conditions, a high proportion of Kp NifL partitions
to the membrane, whereas NifL is found primarily in the cytoplasm
when cultures are grown aerobically or under conditions of nitrogen
sufficiency (54) . In contrast, Kp NifA remains
primarily in the cytoplasm under all conditions tested . The spatial
separation of NifL and NifA under derepressing conditions suggests
that membrane association plays a significant role in releasing Kp
NifA from inhibition by Kp NifL . It seems likely that reduction
of Kp NifL promotes membrane association, since NifL is found mainly
in the cytoplasm in fnr, nuoCD, and fdnG mutant strains
in which redox sensing by Kp NifL is disabled (37,
54) . Likewise, membrane association is not
observed in glnK mutants which are unable to signal the
nitrogen status (54) . Thus, both the presence of
GlnK and reduction of NifL appear to be necessary for membrane
association . The sequestration of GlnK by AmtB upon ammonium upshift
may be a factor in promoting the release of NifL from the membrane (22,
54) . The oxidation of the flavin moiety may also
release NifL to the cytoplasm . However, the precise factors involved
in promoting association and dissociation of NifL with the membrane
remain to be determined .
MECHANISM OF NIFL INHIBITION There are several stages at
which NifL could inhibit transcriptional activation by NifA through
the formation of a protein-protein complex . These stages could
potentially involve prevention of binding to enhancers by the
C-terminal DNA binding domain, inhibition of the functions of the
AAA+ domain, which include oligomerization, nucleotide binding
hydrolysis, and interaction with
54
(103), and remodeling of the GAF domain to induce
intramolecular repression of the AAA+ domain (91) .
Since inhibition by NifL is specific to NifA and NifL apparently does
not control transcriptional activation by other EBPs, it is likely
that there are surface residues in NifA that are specific to the
interaction with NifL . Mutations in Av NifA that confer resistance to
inhibition by Av NifL have been isolated from a library of random
PCR-generated nifA mutants . Mutations conferring resistance
are located in both the GAF and AAA+ domains of Av NifA, implying
that both of these domains are involved in the response (84) .
Some NifA mutants appear to discriminate between the forms of NifL
present in response to different environmental conditions . One of the
mutations in the AAA+ domain, NifA-Y254N, is sensitive to Av
NifL under aerobic growth conditions but is resistant to inhibition
under conditions of nitrogen excess . This mutation may disfavor
formation of the ternary complex with GlnK but remains sensitive to
the binary complex formed with oxidized NifL (Fig . 4) .
|
FIG . 4 . Model showing potential interactions between Av NifL and Av NifA
in response to environmental cues . Only the PAS1 and ADP binding domains
of NifL are shown (open and cross-hatched ovals, respectively) . The
three domains of Av NifA are labeled GAF, AAA, and HTH . Under
nitrogen-limiting conditions GlnK is uridylylated, and provided that the
flavin moiety in Av NifL is reduced, Av NifA is free to activate
transcription, catalyzed by ATP hydrolysis (center diagram) . However,
when Av NifL is oxidized, the NifL-NifA binary complex is formed,
perhaps promoted by conformational changes mediated via the PAS domain .
Formation of the complex sequesters Av NifA, preventing transcriptional
activation . Under nitrogen-excess conditions, when GlnK is in the
noncovalently modified form, it interacts with the C-terminal ADP
binding domain of Av NifL to promote formation of a ternary complex in
which the activity of Av NifA is also inhibited.
|
|
As mentioned above, nucleotide hydrolysis catalyzed by the central
domain of EBPs is necessary to drive conformational changes that
enable
54-RNA
polymerase to form the open promoter complex . The ATPase activity of
Av NifA is inhibited by Av NifL (8, 31),
suggesting that NifL inhibits steps required either for nucleotide
binding (e.g., assembly of AAA+ domain protomers) or for nucleotide
hydrolysis . A major function of NifL is therefore to inhibit
catalysis by NifA and thus prevent transcriptional activation .
However, in a truncated form of Av NifA lacking the GAF domain,
nucleotide hydrolysis is not strongly inhibited by Av NifL, even
though the ability of NifA to activate open complex formation is
inhibited (8) . Similarly, transcriptional activation by the
isolated central domain of Kp NifA is inhibited by Kp NifL in
the absence of inhibition of the ATPase activity of Kp NifA (10) .
This suggests that NifL may inhibit access of
54
to interaction surfaces in the AAA+ domain of NifA (e.g., the GAFTGA
motif) . Thus, NifL may be able to inhibit two discrete functions of
the AAA+ domain, nucleotide hydrolysis and interaction with
54 .
Since inhibition of nucleotide hydrolysis apparently requires the GAF
domain, it appears that this domain may control the ATPase activity
of the AAA+ domain in response to NifL by interdomain repression (8) .
Thus, as suggested by the mutations conferring resistance to NifL,
both the GAF and AAA+ domains of Av NifA may contact Av NifL . There
is also evidence that NifL may inhibit the enhancer binding function
of NifA (8, 71) .
NifL may have inhibitory functions analogous to the functions of
other adaptors of the EBP family, including PspA, which controls the
activity of PspF in E . coli (30), and HrpV, which
inactivates HrpR-HrpS in Pseudomonas syringae (80) .
However, PspF and HrpR-HrpS do not contain an N-terminal regulatory
domain, and NifL, PspA, and HrpV do not exhibit detectable sequence
homology . Like NifL, however, PspA appears to inhibit two functional
states of the PspF AAA+ domain, productive interactions with
54
and nucleotide interactions (30) . However, PspA
interacts directly with the AAA+ domain to inhibit the ATPase
activity of PspF, whereas in the NifL-NifA interaction this function
requires the GAF domain .
CONCLUDING REMARKS The NifL and NifA proteins constitute a
remarkably intricate multidomain regulatory complex in which
complementary interactions between the partners are finely tuned to
integrate signals of redox oxygen, carbon, and the fixed-nitrogen
status . Although the complexities of the interactions are only just
beginning to emerge, it is evident that at least some of the
mechanisms for signal communication are different in K . pneumoniae
and A . vinelandii . The NifL and NifA proteins from these
organisms are 30 and 57% identical, respectively, and yet the two
systems have evidently adapted to the physiologies of their hosts .
Nitrogen regulation provides an obvious example . The two PII-like
proteins in K . pneumoniae regulate the nitrogen response at
both levels of the cascade . The uridylylation status of GlnB controls
transcription of the nifLA operon via the level of NtrC-P .
Under conditions of nitrogen deprivation this also allows activation
of GlnK expression, which is absolutely required to prevent formation
of the inhibitory complex between Kp NifL and Kp NifA . However
the precise role of GlnK in the nitrogen response of the K .
pneumoniae NifL-NifA system remains unclear since the uridylylation
state of GlnK does not apparently influence its function in
preventing NifL-mediated inhibition . In contrast, A . vinelandii
contains only a single PII-like protein, which regulates the
activity of Av NifL in response to uridylylation . The nonmodified
form of GlnK activates NifL, thus favoring formation of the NifL-NifA
complex under conditions of nitrogen excess . These contrasting
mechanisms nevertheless qualitatively provide similar nitrogen
regulatory switches . However, the K . pneumoniae system is
likely to be more stringent, only permitting nitrogen fixation under
conditions of extreme nitrogen deprivation, perhaps reflecting the
high energetic penalty for nitrogen fixation under anaerobic growth
conditions .
Unlike many other members of the EBP family of transcriptional
activators, Kp NifA and Av NifA constitutively activate transcription
in the absence of their partner NifL proteins . In contrast, the
activities of many transcriptional activators of the EBP family are
regulated directly by the amino-terminal regulatory domain, and a
partner protein is not required . Indeed, in many diazotrophic
representatives of the
and ß subgroups of the Proteobacteria, NifA directly
integrates signals for fixed nitrogen and oxygen in the absence of a
NifL-like protein . What, therefore, are the advantages of regulating
nitrogen fixation by this unusual two-component regulatory system?
Clearly, a two-component system is likely to be more sophisticated as
it provides more opportunities for interdomain communication and
signaling interactions and it permits regulation via spatial
separation of the partners . The similarity between NifL and the HPKs
suggests that the NifL-NifA system may have evolved from a
conventional two-component system in which the original equivalent of
NifA may have been a response regulator . Loss of the kinase activity
of the ancient precursor of NifL and acquisition of a GAF domain at
the N terminus of NifA, via a domain swap, may have facilitated
evolution of this fascinating regulatory system .
Work in our laboratory is supported by the UK Biotechnology and
Biological Sciences Research Council .
We thank Gary Sawers for his helpful comments on the manuscript .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Molecular Microbiology, John Innes Centre, Colney Lane, Norwich NR4 7UH, United
Kingdom . Phone: 44 1603-450747 . Fax: 44 1603-450778 . E-mail: ray.dixon@bbsrc.ac.uk.
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