RocG

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  • Description: catabolic glutamate dehydrogenase induced by arginine, ornithine or proline, subject to carbon catabolite repression

Gene name rocG
Synonyms
Essential no
Product glutamate dehydrogenase (major)
Function arginine utilization, controls the activity of GltC
MW, pI 46.2 kDa, 6.28
Gene length, protein length 1272 bp, 424 amino acids
Immediate neighbours yweA, rocA
Gene sequence (+200bp) Protein sequence
Genetic context
RocG context.gif




The gene

Basic information

  • Coordinates: 3879765 - 3881036

Phenotypes of a mutant

Poor growth on complex media such as LB. No growth in minimal media with arginine as the only carbon source. Rapid accumulation of suppressor mutants (gudB1)

Database entries

  • DBTBS entry: [1]
  • SubtiList entry: [2]

Additional information

The protein

Basic information/ Evolution

  • Catalyzed reaction/ biological activity: L-glutamate + H(2)O + NAD(+) = 2-oxoglutarate + NH(3) + NADH
  • Protein family: Glu/Leu/Phe/Val dehydrogenases family
  • Paralogous protein(s): GudB

Extended information on the protein

  • Kinetic information:
  • Domains:
  • Modification:
  • Cofactor(s):
  • Effectors of protein activity:
  • Interactions: RocG-GltC, this interaction prevents transcription activation of the gltAB operon by GltC PubMed
  • Localization:

Database entries

  • Structure:
  • Swiss prot entry: [3]
  • KEGG entry: [4]
  • E.C. number: [5]

Additional information

Expression and regulation

  • Operon: rocG
  • Regulation: induced by arginine (RocR, AhrC), ornithine or proline, subject to carbon catabolite repression (CcpA)
  • Regulatory mechanism: RocR: transcription activation PubMedPubMed; AhrC: transcription activation ; CcpA: transcription repression
  • Additional information:

Activation by RocR requires binding of RocG to a downstream element PubMed

Biological materials

Labs working on this gene/protein

Linc Sonenshein, Tufts University, Boston, MA, USA Homepage

Jörg Stülke, University of Göttingen, Germany Homepage

Your additional remarks

References

  1. Commichau, F. M., Wacker, I., Schleider, J., Blencke, H.-M., Reif, I., Tripal, P., and Stülke, J. (2007) Characterization of Bacillus subtilis mutants with carbon source-independent glutamate biosynthesis. J Mol Microbiol Biotechnol 12: 106-113. PubMed
  2. Commichau, F. M., Herzberg, C., Tripal, P., Valerius, O., and Stülke, J. (2007) A regulatory protein-protein interaction governs glutamate biosynthesis in Bacillus subtilis: The glutamate dehydrogenase RocG moonlights in controlling the transcription factor GltC. Mol Microbiol 65: 642-654. PubMed
  3. Commichau, F. M., Gunka, K., Landmann, J. J. & Stülke, J. (2008) Glutamate metabolism in Bacillus subtilis: Gene expression and enzyme activities evolved to avoid futile cycles and to allow rapid responses to perturbations in the system. J. Bacteriol. 190: 3557-3564. PubMed
  4. Herzberg, C., Flórez Weidinger, L. A., Dörrbecker, B., Hübner, S., Stülke, J. & Commichau, F. M. (2007) SPINE: A method for the rapid detection and analysis of protein-protein interactions in vivo. Proteomics 7: 4032-4035. PubMed
  5. Ali, N. O., J. Jeusset, E. Larquet, E. le Cam, B. Belitsky, A. L. Sonenshein, T. Msadek, and M. Débarbouillé. 2003. Specificity of the interaction of RocR with the rocG-rocA intergenic region in Bacillus subtilis. Microbiology 149: 739-750. PubMed
  6. Belitsky BR, Sonenshein AL (1998) Role and regulation of Bacillus subtilis glutamate dehydrogenase genes. J Bacteriol 180:6298-6305 PubMed
  7. Belitsky BR, Sonenshein, AL: An enhancer element located downstream of the major glutamate dehydrogenase gene of Bacillus subtilis. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 1999, 96:10290-10295. PubMed
  8. Belitsky BR, Sonenshein, AL: CcpA-dependent regulation of Bacillus subtilis glutamate dehydrogenase gene expression. J Bacteriol 2004, 186:3392-3398. PubMed
  9. Belitsky BR, Sonenshein AL (2004) Modulation of activity of Bacillus subtilis regulatory proteins GltC and TnrA by glutamate dehydrogenase. J Bacteriol 186:3399-3407 PubMed
  10. Khan, M. I., K. Ito, H. Kim, H. Ashida, T. Ishikawa, H. Shibata, and Y. Sawa. 2005. Molecular properties and enhancement of thermostability by random mutagenesis of glutamate dehydrogenase from Bacillus subtilis. Biosci. Biotechnol. Biochem. 69: 1861-1870. PubMed
  11. Stillman TJ, Baker PJ, Britton KL, Rice DW Conformational flexibility in glutamate dehydrogenase. Role of water in substrate recognition and catalysis. J Mol Biol 1993, 234:1131-1139. PubMed