EnvZ controls the concentration of phosphorylated OmpR to mediate osmoregulation of the porin genes
Publication Year
1991
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Osmoregulation of the bacterial porin genes ompF and ompC is controlled by a two-component regulatory system. EnvZ, the sensor component of this system, is capable both of phosphorylating and dephosphorylating OmpR, the effector component. Mutations were isolated in envZ that abolish the expression of both porin genes. These mutants appear to have lost the kinase activity of EnvZ while retaining their phosphatase activity, so that in their presence OmpR is completely unphosphorylated. The behavior of these mutants in haploid, and in diploid with other envZ alleles, is consistent with a model in which EnvZ mediates osmoregulation by controlling the concentration of a single species. OmpR-P.
Keywords
phosphorylation,
signal transduction,
Escherichia coli,
Mutagenesis,
Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial,
Repressor Proteins,
Models, Biological,
Phosphoproteins,
Recombinant Fusion Proteins,
Genetic Complementation Test,
Genes, Regulator,
beta-Galactosidase,
Diploidy,
Plasmids,
Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins,
Phosphoprotein Phosphatases,
Porins,
Water-Electrolyte Balance,
Bacteriophages
Journal
J Mol Biol
Volume
222
Issue
3
Pages
567-80
Date Published
12/1991
ISSN Number
0022-2836
Alternate Journal
J Mol Biol
PMID
1660927