Akio Horikawa, Rika Okubo, Naoki Hishikura, Riki Watanabe, Kaori Kurashima-Ito, Pooppadi Maxin Sayeesh, Kohsuke Inomata, Masaki Mishima, Hiroyasu Koteishi, Hitomi Sawai, Yoshitsugu Shiro, Teppei Ikeya, Yutaka Ito
Biomolecular NMR Assignments 2025年2月1日
Abstract
The symbiotic nitrogen-fixing bacterium Bradyrhizobium japonicum (B.japonicum) enables high soybean yields with little or no nitrogen fertiliser. A two component regulatory system comprising FixL, a histidine kinase with O2-sensing activity, and FixJ, a response regulator, controls the expression of genes involved in nitrogen fixation, such as fixK and nifA. Only under anaerobic conditions, the monophosphate group is transferred from FixL to the N-terminal receiver domain of FixJ (FixJN), which eventually promote the association of the C-terminal effector domain (FixJC) to the promoter regions of the nitrogen-fixation-related genes. Structural biological analyses carried out so far for rhizobial FixJ molecules have proposed a solution structure for FixJ that differs from the crystal structures, in which the two domains are extended. To understand the FixJ activation caused by phosphorylation of the N-terminal domain, which presumably regulates through the interactions between FixJN and FixJC, here we have performed backbone and sidechain resonance assignments of the unphosphorylated state of B. japonicum FixJ.