- THIS ARTICLE
-
Abstract
- Full Text (PDF)
- Alert me when this article is cited
- Alert me if a correction is posted
- SERVICES
- Similar articles in this journal
- Similar articles in PubMed
- Alert me to new issues of the journal
- Download to citation manager
- Reprints & Permissions
- CITING ARTICLES
- Citing Articles via HighWire
- Citing Articles via Google Scholar
- GOOGLE SCHOLAR
- Articles by Small, A. J.
- Articles by Davis, M. A.
- Search for Related Content
- PUBMED
- PubMed Citation
- Articles by Small, A. J.
- Articles by Davis, M. A.
The TamA Protein Fused to a DNA-Binding Domain Can Recruit AreA, the Major Nitrogen Regulatory Protein, to Activate Gene Expression in Aspergillus nidulans
Anna J. Smalla, Michael J. Hynesa, and Meryl A. Davisaa Department of Genetics, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3052, Australia
Corresponding author: Meryl A. Davis, Department of Genetics, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3052, Australia., m.davis{at}genetics.unimelb.edu.au (E-mail)
Communicating editor: R. H. DAVIS
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
The areA gene of Aspergillus nidulans encodes a GATA zinc finger transcription factor that activates the expression of a large number of genes subject to nitrogen metabolite repression. The amount and activity of the AreA protein under different nitrogen conditions is modulated by transcriptional, post-transcriptional, and post-translational controls. One of these controls of AreA activity has been proposed to involve the NmrA protein interacting with the DNA-binding domain and the extreme C terminus of AreA to inhibit DNA binding under nitrogen sufficient conditions. In contrast, mutational evidence suggests that the tamA gene has a positive role together with areA in regulating the expression of genes subject to nitrogen metabolite repression. This gene was identified by the selection of mutants resistant to toxic nitrogen source analogues, and a number of nitrogen metabolic activities have been shown to be reduced in these mutants. To investigate the role of this gene we have used constructs encoding the TamA protein fused to the DNA-binding domain of either the FacB or the AmdR regulatory proteins. These hybrid proteins have been shown to activate expression of the genes of acetate or GABA utilization, respectively, as well as the amdS gene. Strong activation was shown to require the AreA protein but was not dependent on AreA binding to DNA. The homologous areA gene of A. oryzae and nit-2 gene of Neurospora crassa can substitute for A. nidulans areA in this interaction. We have shown that the same C-terminal region of AreA and NIT-2 that is involved in the interaction with NmrA is required for the TamA-AreA interaction. However, it is unlikely that TamA requires the same residues as NmrA within the GATA DNA-binding domain of AreA.
NITROGEN metabolite repression (NMR) is a global regulatory system that activates the expression of a large number of nitrogen catabolic genes when cells are nitrogen limited. A combination of classical and molecular genetic analyses have defined areA as the major nitrogen regulatory gene in Aspergillus nidulans (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Detailed two-hybrid analyses and protein studies with NIT-2, the N. crassa homologue of AreA, suggest that the activator function of these proteins can be modified in response to changes in the nitrogen status of the cell. The product of the nmr-1 gene has been shown to interact with the GATA finger and the extreme C terminus of NIT-2 to inhibit its DNA binding (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
The tamA gene of A. nidulans encodes a protein required for full expression of genes under areA control (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
To further investigate the role of TamA, we have tested its ability to function as an activator of gene expression when fused to known DNA-binding domains in A. nidulans. We have found that TamA is able to elevate expression of specific genes when targeted to the promoter by the DNA-binding domain. In addition, the inherent activity of these hybrid proteins is enhanced by AreA. This AreA-dependent activation requires two distinct regions of AreA and the most significant of these overlaps the C-terminal AreA residues required for interaction with NmrA.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
Strains, media, and growth conditions:
Aspergillus media and growth conditions were as described by ![]()
![]()
(areA::riboB) and nmrA
(nmrA::BleR) mutations have been described previously (![]()
![]()
mutation was identified as a spontaneous mutant resistant to 100 mM methylammonium on medium containing 10 mM alanine as the sole nitrogen source (M. A. DAVIS, unpublished results). Gene symbols have been described previously (![]()
|
Aspergillus transformation and assays:
A. nidulans strains were transformed according to the method of ![]()
![]()
![]()
S. cerevisiae strain, transformation, and assays:
The yeast strain YGH1 (a ura3-52 his3-200 ade2-101 lys2-801 trp1-901 leu2-3 Canr gal4-542 gal80-538 LYS2::GAL1uas-GAL1tata-HIS3 URA3::GAL1uas-GAL1tata-lacZ; ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Construction of TamA and AreA fusion plasmids:
pAS4148 (encoding AmdR-TamA) was constructed by subcloning a EcoRV-XbaI fragment from the tamA coding region (amino acids 153658) into pALX129, which contains an amdR ClaI-HindIII fragment containing the promoter and sequences encoding amino acids 1186 of AmdR. pAS4120 (encoding FacB-TamA) was constructed by cloning the EcoRV-XhoI fragment of the tamA coding region (amino acids 152651) into pMH1055, which contains a facB SacI-BamHI fragment containing the promoter and sequences encoding amino acids 1142 of FacB. The BamHI site in this construct was then cut, endfilled, and religated to put facB and tamA in the same reading frame. GAL4DBD-TamA fusions were constructed in the vector pGBT9 (![]()
![]()
| RESULTS |
|---|
TamA as an activator of gene expression:
To determine whether TamA had activator function in A. nidulans, the TamA protein (residues 153651 or 153658) was fused to the Zn(II)2Cys6 DNA-binding domain of FacB (amino acids 1142) or of AmdR (amino acids 1186) to target TamA to specific promoters. The FacB protein is a transcriptional activator required for acetate induction of the amdS gene and the genes of acetate utilization in A. nidulans (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
-amino acid induction of amdS and the genes of
-amino butyric acid (GABA) and 2-pyrollidinone breakdown (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
) and shown to complement the tamA mutation; indicating that residues 153651 were sufficient for tamA function (data not shown).
To determine whether FacB-TamA and AmdR-TamA had activator function, these constructs were cotransformed into MH6209, which carries the amdR44 and facB::BleR loss-of-function mutations and an amdS::lacZ reporter at the amdS locus. While the recipient strain was unable to use either acetate or GABA, cotransformants carrying facB-tamA constructs partially regained the ability to use acetate as a sole carbon source (Figure 1A). The phenotype of the cotransformants was not copy number dependent. Thus, with the DNA-binding domain of FacB tethering the TamA protein to the promoters of the acetate utilization genes, the FacB-TamA hybrid protein could substitute for the normal FacB function of activating gene expression. When TamA was fused to the AmdR DNA-binding domain, the fusion protein restored AmdR-dependent expression of the genes of GABA utilization while having no effect on acetate utilization (Figure 1B). Therefore, the activation of particular genes was determined by the DNA-binding domain used to target the TamA fusion protein to specific promoters (see Figure 1C).
|
Both AmdR and FacB regulate amdS expression and ß-galactosidase assays indicated that both AmdR-TamA and FacB-TamA were able to strongly activate expression of an amdS::lacZ reporter gene (Table 2). Expression of amdS::lacZ is regulated by nitrogen metabolite repression and relief of repression under nitrogen-free conditions results in a 10-fold increase in expression in an areA+ background (![]()
![]()
|
TamA activation is AreA dependent:
To investigate the contribution of AreA to the activation by FacB-TamA or AmdR-TamA, these constructs were cotransformed into areA
(MH8845) and areA217 (MH8767 or MH8827) strains. Both areA
and areA217 mutations result in an extreme loss-of-function phenotype. The areA
mutation deletes the entire areA gene and areA217 mutation is a loss-of-function allele due to a missense mutation that alters glycine 698, adjacent to the last cysteine of the GATA finger, to an aspartate residue (![]()
![]()
The expression of AmdR-TamA restored growth on GABA in an areA217 background, but not in an areA
background (Figure 2A). Similarly, AmdR-TamA and FacB-TamA strongly activated amdS::lacZ expression in areA217 strains but not in an areA
background (Table 2). In both the areA
and areA217 strains, amdS::lacZ expression did not respond to the relief of nitrogen metabolite repression due to loss of AreA function. In an areA
background, neither AmdR-TamA nor FacB-TamA was able to activate expression to areA+ levels. The residual activation in the absence of AreA suggested that the hybrid proteins also had areA-independent activator function.
|
In contrast to an areA
background, in an areA217 mutant background FacB-TamA and AmdR-TamA were able to strongly activate amdS::lacZ expression. ß-Galactosidase levels were as high or higher than the levels detected in an areA+ background under both repressed and derepressed conditions. Therefore, the AreA protein is required for high levels of activation by the TamA hybrid proteins but AreA DNA binding is not a prerequisite. This suggests that TamA bound to the amdS promoter by either the FacB or AmdR DNA-binding domains could recruit AreA as a transcriptional activator.
Interaction requires the C terminus of AreA:
The loss-of-function phenotype of an areA
mutant can be complemented by the A. nidulans areA gene or the A. oryzae areA (oareA) or N. crassa nit-2 homologues (![]()
![]()
![]()
strain expressing FacB-TamA (MH9024), activation of amdS::lacZ expression was restored to levels equivalent to areA+ strains cotransformed with FacB-TamA. The A. oryzae areA gene also activated expression of amdS::lacZ in combination with the A. nidulans FacB-TamA, consistent with its structural and functional similarity to A. nidulans areA (Figure 3).
|
A series of A. oryzae areA deletion plasmids, which encode AreA products able to complement an A. nidulans areA deletion mutant for growth on nitrate (![]()
In contrast, the C terminus of oAreA was critical for interaction with FacB-TamA. Deletions removing the C-terminal residues affected oAreA function only slightly when tested in the absence of FacB-TamA yet virtually abolished the AreA-dependent component of FacB-TamA activation. Therefore, the C-terminal 58 amino acids of A. oryzae AreA are essential for interaction with TamA. An internal deletion that removes amino acids 326648 of oAreA resulted in a protein with weak activator function in the presence or absence of FacB-TamA. This deletion is thought to remove AreA activation domains and to allow complementation of an areA loss-of-function mutant only on those nitrogen sources such as nitrate or proline that have strong induction signals to compensate for poor AreA activation function (![]()
Several A. nidulans areA mutants that specifically affect the C-terminal region of the encoded protein have been created (![]()
743864-mutant encodes an AreA protein that lacks C-terminal residues 743864 but retains the extreme C-terminal residues from 865 to 876 while the areA
844876-encoded protein lacks the last 32 amino acids of the AreA protein. Neither mutant version of the AreA protein activated amdS::lacZ expression as well as full-length AreA in the absence of FacB-TamA. However, the areA
743864-encoded protein was able to increase amdS::lacZ expression via FacB-TamA, indicating that the residues 743864 of AreA are not required for the interaction. In contrast, activation of amdS::lacZ via FacB-TamA was greatly impaired in the areA
844876 background. The levels of expression were comparable to those seen with the C-terminal deletion of oAreA. Comparison of the predicted protein products of the two areA mutants indicated that amino acids 865876 were required for FacB-TamA interaction.
|
Activation by FacB-TamA is independent of NmrA and TamA:
Interestingly the amino acids 865876 of AreA required for interaction with TamA are the same C-terminal residues predicted to interact with the negatively acting NmrA protein of A. nidulans (![]()
![]()
background particularly on ammonium compared to levels seen in a wild-type background. Therefore, NmrA was not required for FacB-TamA activation. In addition, the wild-type TamA protein was not required. In the absence of FacB-TamA, the tamA
mutant MH9219 had reduced levels of amdS::lacZ expression compared to wild type due to the loss of tamA function. The FacB-TamA-dependent expression of amdS::lacZ was significantly elevated in a tamA
background compared to a wild-type background (Table 3). Rather than being required for FacB-TamA activation, these results suggested that the wild-type TamA protein may partially interfere with FacB-TamA activation.
TamA and NmrA interact with common but not identical regions of AreA/NIT-2:
It was of considerable interest to determine whether the regions of AreA involved in TamA and NmrA interaction completely overlap. The N. crassa nit-2 gene transformed into A. nidulans strain MH9024 (areA
; FacB-TamA) was able to substitute for AreA consistent with previous studies showing that nit-2 complemented the areA217 loss-of-function mutation (![]()
![]()
![]()
|
TamA and AreA interact in S. cerevisiae:
A series of constructs in which TamA (amino acids 30651, 30359, 153159, 360651, or 470651) was fused to the GAL4 DNA-binding domain (GAL4DBD) were made. Each of these GAL4DBD-TamA fusions was transformed into S. cerevisiae. None were able to activate expression of the HIS3 and lacZ reporter genes sufficiently to allow transformants to grow on media lacking histidine or produce detectable levels of ß-galactosidase (data not shown). Therefore, the TamA protein lacks sequences able to function as activation domains in S. cerevisiae.
The yeast two-hybrid system was used to test for interaction between the TamA and the AreA proteins. A variety of constructs in which the GAL4 activation domain (GAL4AD) was fused to the AreA protein (amino acids 178876, 178755, or 178402) were made. These constructs were transformed into S. cerevisiae in combination with GAL4DBD and none allowed growth on minimal media (data not shown). Each of the GAL4DBD-TamA fusions was tested in combination with the GAL4AD construct and each of the GAL4AD-AreA fusions. Most combinations gave no evidence of interaction (data not shown) although transformants carrying GAL4DBD-TamA(30651) in combination with GAL4AD alone were able to grow on minimal media. These transformants were positive for the X-gal filter test although levels were extremely low. However, transformants carrying both GAL4DBD-TamA(30651) and GAL4AD-AreA(178876) were able to grow strongly on media lacking histidine and were positive on X-gal filter tests (Figure 5). These results provide evidence for a weak interaction between TamA and AreA in S. cerevisiae as determined by quantitative ß-galactosidase assays relative to the strong interaction of the Jun and Fos control (Figure 5). The level of interaction between TamA and AreA detected in S. cerevisiae is similar to the weak, but significant, interaction of the mammalian Rb and E2F1 proteins (![]()
|
The interaction between the AreA and TamA hybrid proteins was abolished when the N-terminal (30359 or 153359) or C-terminal (360651 or 470651) residues of TamA were expressed in the presence of GAL4AD-AreA(178876) suggesting that an intact TamA protein was required. Significantly, C-terminal truncation of AreA (178755 or 178402) also prevented a positive interaction. Therefore, the C-terminal region of AreA required for interaction with FacB-TamA or AmdR-TamA in A. nidulans was also required for interaction to form a functional two-hybrid GAL4 activator in S. cerevisiae.
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
An understanding of the role of the tamA gene in nitrogen metabolite repression in A. nidulans has been elusive. The gene was initially defined by the isolation of mutants that produced lowered levels of a variety of nitrogen metabolic enzymes sufficient to give resistance to toxic nitrogen source analogues (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
We have addressed the possibility that TamA functions as a transcriptional activator. As TamA may not bind DNA directly, it may be brought to a promoter by interaction with a DNA-binding protein. We have mimicked this situation by fusing TamA directly to a functional DNA-binding domain. These TamA hybrid proteins are strong activators of gene expression in A. nidulans and AreA is a major source of their activation potential. We propose that the TamA fusions are recruiting AreA to the relevant promoters. This is supported by the finding that the mutant AreA217 protein that lacks DNA-binding activity was able to activate expression when recruited by interaction with TamA. This result also indicates that AreA was not required indirectly to activate transcription of an unknown protein that then interacts with the TamA fusion protein. If that were so, then the areA217 strain would lack the activation of expression of this protein.
Two regions of A. oryzae AreA are required for TamA interaction; the most significant is in the C terminus and a less critical region is in its N-terminal segment. Using areA mutants of A. nidulans (![]()
844876 mutant should resemble that of a tamA mutant. This is supported by the observations of ![]()
844876 strains have a partial loss-of-function phenotype and increased resistance to certain toxic nitrogen source analogues. The C-terminal 9 amino acids are absolutely conserved in A. nidulans, A. oryzae, and N. crassa as is a similar sequence (residues 116131 of AreA) within the region of a possible second TamA interaction site. Interestingly, deletion of the N-terminal AreA residues 2389 results in resistance to chlorate and ß-aspartate hydroxymate consistent with slightly reduced areA function (![]()
The C terminus of AreA is involved in interaction with the negatively acting NmrA protein (![]()
![]()
![]()
strain. Therefore, TamA and NmrA may compete for the same C-terminal region and the role of TamA may be to displace NmrA under nitrogen-limiting conditions. Consistent with this proposal, amdS::lacZ expression was higher in an nmrA
background where AreA may be more accessible to the TamA fusion proteins in the absence of NmrA competition. However, the AreA-TamA interaction was also detectable under nitrogen-sufficient conditions, indicating that NmrA is unable to outcompete TamA for access to AreA.
In the absence of AreA, the TamA fusion protein retained detectable activation activity. This could be due to activation domains within TamA itself, although when linked to the GAL4 DNA-binding domain, TamA had no apparent activation capacity in S. cerevisiae. This highlights possible species-specific differences between A. nidulans and S. cerevisiae. TamA, bound to DNA by the FacB or AmdR DNA-binding domains, was able to bring about strong AreA-dependent activation in A. nidulans. However, TamA bound to DNA by the GAL4 DNA-binding domain was not able to bring the homologous nitrogen regulators, GLN3 and/or NIL1/GAT1, into the proximity of the relevant promoters in S. cerevisiae. The C-terminal amino acid sequences of GLN3 and NIL1/GAT1 are not highly conserved with AreA or NIT-2. Therefore, divergence in these sequences may prevent A. nidulans TamA from interacting with the S. cerevisiae nitrogen regulators. There is no evidence that additional factors were preventing this interaction as we were able to detect an interaction between TamA and AreA in S. cerevisiae. This interaction was weak, but the two-hybrid assay may underestimate the strength of the TamA-AreA interaction as the GAL4AD-AreA component contains the AreA GATA finger. This hybrid protein could bind to GATA sites within the S. cerevisiae genome limiting the amount of product available to interact with GAL4DBD-TamA. A similar phenomenon has been observed with constructs expressing the FacB DNA-binding domain in S. cerevisiae (![]()
Our experiments indicate that TamA, once bound to DNA, can recruit the transcriptional capacity of AreA to specific promoters. However, in a wild-type situation, it is more likely that the GATA finger of AreA allows recognition of the target promoters of nitrogen-regulated genes and TamA is recruited through interaction with AreA (Figure 6). The positive role of TamA in this interaction remains unclear. The previously described interactions of AreA, NIT-2, and other mammalian or Drosophila GATA transcription factors that modify the activity of the GATA factor all involve interactions with the GATA finger (see ![]()
|
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We are grateful to Mark Caddick, University of Liverpool, England, for providing us with strains carrying areA
743864 and areA
844876 mutations and George Marzluf, Ohio State University, for providing nit-2 plasmids carrying the nit2-P1 and nit2-2 mutations. We acknowledge the support of the Australian Research Council for funding and an Australian Postgraduate Award to A.J.S.
Manuscript received January 11, 1999; Accepted for publication May 21, 1999.
| LITERATURE CITED |
|---|
ANDRIANOPOULOS, A. and M. J. HYNES, 1988 Cloning and analysis of the positively acting regulatory gene amdR from Aspergillus nidulans.. Mol. Cell. Biol. 8:3532-3541
ANDRIANOPOULOS, A. and M. J. HYNES, 1990 Sequence and functional analysis of the positively-acting regulatory gene amdR from Aspergillus nidulans.. Mol. Cell. Biol. 10:3194-3203
ANDRIANOPOULOS, A., S. KOURAMBAS, J. A. SHARP, M. A. DAVIS, and M. J. HYNES, 1998 Characterization of the Aspergillus nidulans nmrA gene involved in nitrogen metabolite repression. J. Bacteriol. 180:1973-1977
APIRION, D., 1965 The two-way selection of mutants and revertants in respect of acetate utilization and resistance to fluoroacetate in Aspergillus nidulans.. Genet. Res. 6:317-329[Medline].
ARMITT, S., W. MCCULLOUGH, and C. F. ROBERTS, 1976 Analysis of acetate non-utilizing (acu) mutants in Aspergillus nidulans.. J. Gen. Microbiol. 92:263-282[Medline].
ARST, H. N., JR., 1976 Integrator gene in Aspergillus nidulans.. Nature 262:231-234[Medline].
ARST, H. N., JR. and D. J. COVE, 1973 Nitrogen metabolite repression in Aspergillus nidulans.. Mol. Gen. Genet. 126:111-141[Medline].
ARST, H. N., JR., H. A. PENFOLD, and C. R. BAILEY, 1978 Lactam utilization in Aspergillus nidulans: evidence for a fourth gene under the control of the integrator gene intA.. Mol. Gen. Genet. 166:321-327[Medline].
ARST, H. N., JR., A. G. BROWNLEE, and S. E. COUSEN, 1982 Nitrogen metabolite repression in Aspergillus nidulans: a farewell to tamA? Curr. Genet. 6:245-256.
AUSUBEL, F. M., R. BRENT, R. E. KINGSTON, D. D. MOORE, J. A. SMITH et al., 1987 Current protocols in molecular biology. John Wiley & Sons, New York.
BARTEK, J., J. BARTKOVA, and J. LUCAS, 1996 The retinoblastoma protein pathway and the restriction point. Curr. Opin. Cell Biol. 8:805-814[Medline].
BARTEL, P. L. and L. ZHU, 1993 Rapid identification of genes encoding interacting proteins with the MATCHMAKERTM two-hybrid system. Clontechniques 8:1-5.
BONNEFOY, N., J. COPSEY, M. J. HYNES, and M. A. DAVIS, 1995 Yeast proteins can activate expression through regulatory sequences of the amdS gene of Aspergillus nidulans.. Mol. Gen. Genet. 246:223-227[Medline].
BRICMONT, P. A., J. R. DAUGHERTY, and T. G. COOPER, 1991 The DAL81 gene product is required for induced expression of two differently regulated nitrogen catabolic genes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.. Mol. Cell. Biol. 11:1161-1166
CADDICK, M. X. and H. N. ARST, JR., 1998 Deletion of the 389 N-terminal residues of the transcriptional activator AREA does not result in nitrogen metabolite derepression in Aspergillus nidulans.. J. Bacteriol. 180:5762-5764
CHRISTENSEN, T., M. J. HYNES, and M. A. DAVIS, 1998 Role of the regulatory gene areA of Aspergillus oryzae in nitrogen metabolism. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 64:3232-3237
CLUTTERBUCK, A. J., 1974 Aspergillus nidulans genetics, pp. 447510 in Handbook of Genetics, Vol. 1, edited by R. C. KING. Plenum Press, New York.
COFFMAN, J. A., R. RAI, D. LOPRETE, T. CUNNINGHAM, and V. SVETLOV et al., 1997 Cross regulation of four GATA factors that control nitrogen catabolic gene expression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.. J. Bacteriol. 179:3416-3429
COVE, D. J., 1966 The induction and repression of nitrate reductase in the fungus Aspergillus nidulans.. Biochim. Biophys. Acta 133:51-56.
DAVIS, M. A. and M. J. HYNES, 1987 Complementation of areA- regulatory gene mutations of Aspergillus nidulans by the heterologous gene nit-2 of Neurospora crassa.. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 84:3753-3757
DAVIS, M. A., C. S. COBBETT, and M. J. HYNES, 1988 An amdS-lacZ fusion for studying gene regulation in Aspergillus nidulans.. Gene 63:199-212[Medline].
DAVIS, M. A., A. J. SMALL, S. KOURAMBAS, and M. J. HYNES, 1996 The tamA gene of Aspergillus nidulans contains a putative zinc cluster motif which is not required for gene function. J. Bacteriol. 178:3406-3409
FROELINGER, E. H. and B. E. CARPENTER, 1996 NUT1, a major nitrogen regulatory gene in Magnaporthe grisea, is dispensable for pathogenicity. Mol. Gen. Genet. 251:647-656[Medline].
FU, Y.-H. and G. A. MARZLUF, 1990 nit-2, the major nitrogen regulatory gene of Neurospora crassa, encodes a sequence-specific DNA-binding protein. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 87:5331-5335
GEITZ, D., A. ST. JEAN, R. A. WOODS, and R. H. SCHIESTL, 1992 Improved method for high efficiency transformation of intact yeast cells. Nucleic Acids Res. 20:1425
HAAS, H., B. BAUER, B. REDL, G. STOFFLER, and G. A. MARZLUF, 1995 Molecular cloning and analysis of nre, the major nitrogen regulatory gene of Penicillium chrysogenum.. Curr. Genet. 27:150-158[Medline].
HANNON, G. J., D. DEMETRICK, and D. BEACH, 1993 Isolation of the Rb-related p130 through its interaction with CDK2 and cyclins. Genes Dev. 7:2378-2391
HYNES, M. J., 1975 Studies on the role of the areA gene in the regulation of nitrogen catabolism in Aspergillus nidulans.. Aust. J. Biol. Sci. 28:301-313[Medline].
HYNES, M. J., 1977 Induction of the acetamidase of Aspergillus nidulans by acetate metabolism. J. Bacteriol. 131:770-775
ITO, H., Y. FUKUDA, K. MURATA, and A. KIMURA, 1983 Transformation of intact yeast cells treated with alkali cations. J. Bacteriol. 153:163-168
KATZ, M. E. and M. J. HYNES, 1989 Isolation and analysis of the acetate regulatory gene, facB, from Aspergillus nidulans.. Mol. Cell. Biol. 9:5696-5701
KINGHORN, J. R. and J. A. PATEMAN, 1975 Studies of partially repressed mutants at the tamA and areA loci in Aspergillus nidulans.. Mol. Gen. Genet. 140:137-147[Medline].
KUDLA, B., M. X. CADDICK, T. LANGDON, N. MARTINEZ-ROSSI, and C. F. BENNETT et al., 1990 The regulatory gene areA mediating nitrogen metabolite repression in Aspergillus nidulans: mutations affecting specificity of gene activation alter a loop residue of a putative zinc finger. EMBO J. 9:1355-1364[Medline].
MACKAY, J. P. and M. CROSSLEY, 1998 Zinc fingers are sticking together. Trends Biochem. Sci. 23:1-4[Medline].
MARZLUF, G. A., 1997 Genetic regulation of nitrogen metabolism in fungi. Microbiol. Mol. Biol. Rev. 61:17-32[Abstract].
MINEHART, P. L. and B. MAGASANIK, 1991 Sequence and expression of GLN3, a positive nitrogen regulatory gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae encoding a protein with a putative zinc finger DNA-binding domain. Mol. Cell. Biol. 11:6216-6228
OAKLEY, C. E., C. F. WEIL, P. L. KRETZ, and B. R. OAKLEY, 1987 Cloning of the riboB locus of Aspergillus nidulans.. Gene 53:293-298[Medline].
PAN, H., B. FENG, and G. A. MARZLUF, 1997 Two distinct protein-protein interactions between the NIT2 and NMR regulatory proteins are required to establish nitrogen metabolite repression in Neurospora crassa.. Mol. Microbiol. 26:721-729[Medline].
PARSONS, L. M., M. A. DAVIS, and M. J. HYNES, 1992 Identification of functional regions of the positively acting regulatory gene amdR from Aspergillus nidulans.. Mol. Microbiol. 6:2999-3007[Medline].
PLATT, A., T. LANGDON, H. N. ARST, JR., D. KIRK, and D. TOLLERVEY et al., 1996 Nitrogen metabolite signalling involves the C-terminus and the GATA domain of the Aspergillus transcription factor AREA and the 3' untranslated region of its mRNA. EMBO J. 15:2791-2801[Medline].
STANBOROUGH, M., D. W. ROWEN, and B. MAGASANIK, 1995 Role of GATA factors Gln3p and Nil1p of Saccharomyces cerevisiae in the expression of nitrogen-regulated genes. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 92:9450-9454
TODD, R. B., 1995 Analysis of the facB gene of Aspergillus nidulans. Ph.D. Thesis, The University of Melbourne.
TODD, R. B., R. L. MURPHY, H. M. MARTIN, J. A. SHARP, and M. A. DAVIS et al., 1997a The acetate regulatory gene facB of Aspergillus nidulans encodes a Zn(II)2Cys6 transcriptional activator. Mol. Gen. Genet. 254:495-504[Medline].
TODD, R. B., J. M. KELLY, M. A. DAVIS, and M. J. HYNES, 1997b Molecular characterization of mutants of the acetate regulatory gene facB of Aspergillus nidulans.. Fungal Genet. Biol. 22:92-102[Medline].
XIAO, X., Y.-H. FU, and G. A. MARZLUF, 1995 The negative-acting NMR regulatory protein of Neurospora crassa binds to and inhibits the DNA-binding activity of the positive-acting nitrogen regulatory protein NIT2. Biochemistry 34:8861-8868[Medline].
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
B. J. Monahan, M. C. Askin, M. J. Hynes, and M. A. Davis Differential Expression of Aspergillus nidulans Ammonium Permease Genes Is Regulated by GATA Transcription Factor AreA Eukaryot. Cell, February 1, 2006; 5(2): 226 - 237. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
F. Abdel-Sater, I. Iraqui, A. Urrestarazu, and B. Andre The External Amino Acid Signaling Pathway Promotes Activation of Stp1 and Uga35/Dal81 Transcription Factors for Induction of the AGP1 Gene in Saccharomyces cerevisiae Genetics, April 1, 2004; 166(4): 1727 - 1739. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
S. Margelis, C. D'Souza, A. J. Small, M. J. Hynes, T. H. Adams, and M. A. Davis Role of Glutamine Synthetase in Nitrogen Metabolite Repression in Aspergillus nidulans J. Bacteriol., October 15, 2001; 183(20): 5826 - 5833. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
J. A. Fraser, M. A. Davis, and M. J. Hynes The Formamidase Gene of Aspergillus nidulans: Regulation by Nitrogen Metabolite Repression and Transcriptional Interference by an Overlapping Upstream Gene Genetics, January 1, 2001; 157(1): 119 - 131. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
||||
- THIS ARTICLE
-
Abstract
- Full Text (PDF)
- Alert me when this article is cited
- Alert me if a correction is posted
- SERVICES
- Similar articles in this journal
- Similar articles in PubMed
- Alert me to new issues of the journal
- Download to citation manager
- Reprints & Permissions
- CITING ARTICLES
- Citing Articles via HighWire
- Citing Articles via Google Scholar
- GOOGLE SCHOLAR
- Articles by Small, A. J.
- Articles by Davis, M. A.
- Search for Related Content
- PUBMED
- PubMed Citation
- Articles by Small, A. J.
- Articles by Davis, M. A.








