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Two-component signal transduction systems comprise a sensor histidine kinase and its cognate response regulator, and some have evolved to sense and convert redox signals into regulatory outputs that allow bacteria to adapt to the altered redox environment. The work presented here expands knowledge of the functional diversity of redox-sensing kinases to control carbon catabolite repression (CCR), a phenomenon that allows the selective assimilation of a preferred compound among a mixture of several carbon sources. The newly characterized AccS sensor kinase is responsible for the phosphorylation and activation of the AccR master regulator involved in CCR of the anaerobic degradation of aromatic compounds in the betaproteobacterium Azoarcus sp. CIB. AccS seems to have a thiol-based redox switch that is modulated by the redox state of the quinone pool. The AccSR system is conserved in several betaproteobacteria, where it might play a more general role controlling their global metabolic state.
Catabolite Repression, quinones, Redox switch, Histidine Kinase, Quinones, Azoarcus, Microbiology, QR1-502, redox switch, Anaerobiosis, Phosphorylation, Protein Multimerization, Sensor kinase, Oxidation-Reduction, Protein Processing, Post-Translational, sensor kinase, Catabolite repression, catabolite repression, Research Article
Catabolite Repression, quinones, Redox switch, Histidine Kinase, Quinones, Azoarcus, Microbiology, QR1-502, redox switch, Anaerobiosis, Phosphorylation, Protein Multimerization, Sensor kinase, Oxidation-Reduction, Protein Processing, Post-Translational, sensor kinase, Catabolite repression, catabolite repression, Research Article
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