The regulatory action of the myxobacterial CarD/CarG complex: a bacterial enhanceosome?
- PMID: 20561058
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1574-6976.2010.00235.x
The regulatory action of the myxobacterial CarD/CarG complex: a bacterial enhanceosome?
Abstract
A global regulatory complex made up of two unconventional transcriptional factors, CarD and CarG, is implicated in the control of various processes in Myxococcus xanthus, a Gram-negative bacterium that serves as a prokaryotic model system for multicellular development and the response to blue light. CarD has a unique two-domain architecture composed of: (1) a C-terminal DNA-binding domain that resembles eukaryotic high mobility group A (HMGA) proteins, which are relatively abundant, nonhistone components of chromatin that remodel DNA and prime it for the assembly of multiprotein-DNA complexes essential for various DNA transactions, and (2) an N-terminal domain involved in interactions with CarG and RNA polymerase, which is also the founding member of the large CarD_TRCF family of bacterial proteins. CarG, which does not bind DNA directly, has a zinc-binding motif of the type found in the archaemetzincin class of metalloproteases that, in CarG, appears to play a purely structural role. This review aims to provide an overview of the known molecular details and insights emerging from the study of the singular CarD-CarG prokaryotic regulatory complex and its parallels with enhanceosomes, the higher order, nucleoprotein transcription complexes in eukaryotes.
Comment in
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Variations on transcriptional and post-transcriptional processes in bacteria.FEMS Microbiol Rev. 2010 Sep;34(5):611-27. doi: 10.1111/j.1574-6976.2010.00245.x. Epub 2010 Jul 15. FEMS Microbiol Rev. 2010. PMID: 20678145 No abstract available.
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