Browsing by Author "Col, Bekir"
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- Footprint Analysis of the Transcriptional Control of Glycogen Phosphorylase 2 in Dictyostelium DiscoideumCol, Bekir (Virginia Tech, 1997-12-12)Glycogen phosphorylase 2 (gp-2) is a key enzyme during the development of Dictyostelium discoideum. The gp-2 enzyme breaks down glycogen into glucose monomers that are subsequently used to synthesize the terminal end products of cellular differentiation. This gene is an ideal candidate for studying the process of selective gene expression because its product figures so prominently in the development of this organism, implying a dependable control mechanism responsible for its developmentally regulated expression. I present in this thesis the identification of several putative cis-acting elements of gp-2 as revealed through footprint analysis. Due to the extreme AT-bias characteristic of Dictyostelium promoters, footprinting conditions required intensive optimization with respect to template, nonspecific competitor, source of protein extract and DNase I digestion. Using an endlabeled fragment containing seven repeated sequences (3 TA boxes [TAATTATA], 2 TAG boxes [TAAAAATGGT] and 2 C boxes [ACCCACT]), purified replication protein A and several developmental nuclear extracts were tested for DNA binding activity. Small footprints were observed on the TAG and C boxes of the promoter for both protein sources. However, using a more sensitive footprinting strategy involving multiple rounds of primer extension, larger footprints spanning the same promoter regions were detected. In both cases, the appearance of the footprints coincided with the documented transcriptional activity of the gene. It can be concluded from the data obtained that the TAG and C boxes are very likely cis-acting elements involved in the regulation of gp-2 expression.
- Regulation of Fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase II (GlpX) Gene Expression in Escherichia coliCol, Bekir (Virginia Tech, 2004-02-24)The glpX gene of Escherichia coli encodes fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase II (FBPase II), an enzyme that would appear to be redundant with FBPase I, encoded by fbp. However, glpX mutants have no apparent phenotype, while fbp mutants are unable to grow on gluconeogenic substrates as sole carbon sources, suggesting that GlpX function is insufficient for growth of fbp mutants under these conditions. To gain insight into the physiological functions of the FBPases, regulation of glpX expression was investigated. It was found that glpX is transcribed as part of a complex glpFKX operon containing promoters upstream of glpF, glpK and glpX (PglpF, PglpK, PglpX, respectively). Transcription start sites of PglpX were found at -24 and -41 relative to the ATG translation initiation site using primer extension analysis. Unlike PglpF, these newly found promoters were not subject to regulation by GlpR or cAMP-CRP. Cra (Catabolite Repressor/Activator) positively regulated expression from PglpK and PglpX by increasing transcription approximately 2 fold. Western analysis using GlpX polyclonal antibodies revealed that GlpX levels were higher in cultures grown on glycerol compared with levels in maltose- or glucose-grown cultures (glycerol>maltose>glucose). Various strains and growth conditions were used to show that GlpX levels are regulated by GlpR, suggesting that PglpF can give rise to expression of glpX. GlpX protein was present in a strain containing a polar insertion in glpK, indicating that PglpX can also give rise to expression of glpX. Strains deficient in FBPase I or CsrA (carbon starvation regulator) did not reveal any difference in GlpX levels with respect to the wild type. All of these data indicate that glpX expression is achieved by its own promoter as well as the operon promoter, PglpF. Finally, the results show that the delta-fbp phenotype is not due to the absence of GlpX.