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. 1999 Oct 1;18(19):5175–5186. doi: 10.1093/emboj/18.19.5175

Crystal structure and induction mechanism of AmiC-AmiR: a ligand-regulated transcription antitermination complex.

B P O'Hara 1, R A Norman 1, P T Wan 1, S M Roe 1, T E Barrett 1, R E Drew 1, L H Pearl 1
PMCID: PMC1171588  PMID: 10508151

Abstract

Inducible expression of the aliphatic amidase operon in Pseudomonas aeruginosa is controlled by an antitermination mechanism which allows production of the full-length transcript only in the presence of small-molecule inducers, such as acetamide. Ligand-regulated antitermination is provided by AmiC, the ligand-sensitive negative regulator, and AmiR, the RNA-binding positive regulator. Under non-inducing or repressing growth conditions, AmiC and AmiR form a complex in which the activity of AmiR is silenced. The crystal structure of the AmiC-AmiR complex identifies AmiR as a new and highly unusual member of the response-regulator family of bacterial signal transduction proteins, regulated by sequestration rather than phosphorylation. Comparison with the structure of free AmiC reveals the subtle mechanism of ligand-induced release of AmiR.

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