, 2006) Although the growth of this strain on anthranilate as a

, 2006). Although the growth of this strain on anthranilate as a sole carbon source was not fully restored, it formed tiny colonies on the plate. These findings indicated that the andAc gene is essential for the utilization of tryptophan and anthranilate. To clarify the inducer

of the andA operon, we tested the effects of tryptophan and anthranilate on the induction of the Alectinib andA operon using a lacZ reporter strain EN80, which carried an insertion of the lacZ gene downstream of the andA promoter region but still maintains the intact andA operon (see Materials and Methods for details). Figure 2a shows that the andA operon was up-regulated by tryptophan and anthranilate, but not by the other compounds tested (phenylalanine, proline, o-phthalate, benzoate, catechol, and tyrosine). To clarify whether tryptophan itself or its metabolite is an inducer of the andA promoter, 17616ΔkynA, an ATCC 17616 mutant lacking tryptophan dioxygenase was constructed. The andA promoter in this mutant did not respond to tryptophan, and the loss of induction by tryptophan was restored by supplying in trans selleck screening library the wild-type kynA gene (Fig. 2b). In the mutant, andA promoter responded

to anthranilate as in the wild-type cell (Fig. 2c). To investigate the roles of AndR and Fur in the expression of the andA operon, the andA promoter activities were measured Galeterone in andR and fur mutants. The induction of the andA promoter in M9 medium by anthranilate was abolished in the andR mutant (EN80ΔandR; Fig. 3a). The complementation of the andR gene in trans restored the induction by tryptophan, which was qualitatively confirmed in an X-gal containing medium (data not shown). In the fur mutant (EN80Δfur), the andA promoter activity was decreased

to half the wild-type level, and this decrease was restored by supplying the fur gene in trans (Fig. 3b). We also tested the effect of an iron-chelating agent, 2,2′-dipyridyl, on the andA promoter activity. It decreased the andA promoter activity in the wild-type strain to a level comparable to that in EN80Δfur in the absence of it (Fig. 3b). The effect of agent was not observed in EN80Δfur, and the supplying EN80Δfur in trans with the fur gene restored the effect of 2,2′-dipyridyl (Fig. 3b). We next investigated whether the andA induction in the soil environment is under the control of AndR or Fur. The two reporter strains, EN80ΔandR and EN80Δfur, were inoculated into the soil sample, and after the incubation for 3 weeks, the cells were recovered to measure their LacZ activities (Fig. 3c). In good agreement with the results conducted under the M9 laboratory conditions, the andA promoter induction was strongly and moderately dependent on the andR and fur, respectively. The wild-type levels of activity were also restored by supplying in trans the respective intact genes.

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