| Biochemistry Faculty |
| Scott Briggs |
| Steve Broyles |
| Clint Chapple |
| Harry Charbonneau |
| James Clemens |
| James Forney |
| Frederick S. Gimble |
| Barbara Golden |
| Mark Hall |
| Mark Hermodson |
| Ann Kirchmaier |
| Xiaoqi Liu |
| Joe Ogas |
| Sandra Rossie |
| W. Andy Tao |
| Henry Weiner |
| H. Lee Weith |
| Adjunct Faculty |
| Jon Lebowitz |
| Emeritus Professors |
| Karl Brandt |
| Bernard Axelrod |
| Klaus Herrmann |
| Ki-Han Kim |
| Gunter Kohlhaw |
| David Krogmann |
| Victor Rodwell |
| Ronald Somerville |
| Roy Whistler |
| Howard Zalkin |
Ronald L. SomervilleProfessor Emeritus I retired from the Biochemistry faculty in 2004, and thus no longer accept students or visitors. |
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Molecular Biology of the TrpR Protein: The formation of stable noncovalent complexes between regulatory proteins and punctuation elements in duplex DNA is central to the expression of controlled genes. A suitable model system for studying the fundamentals of protein-DNA interaction is TrpR protein of Escherichia coli. This protein is a homodimer (monomer MW 12,356) whose primary, secondary and tertiary structures are known, and whose gene (trpR) is available in a variety of useful vectors. Ordinarily TrpR protein has weak affinity for DNA; however, when L-tryptophan binds to the protein, a conformational change occurs. The resulting liganded species has high affinity for several operator targets, many of which lie within promoters specific for genes related to the biosynthesis of tryptophan. Using wild-type and mutant TrpR proteins, we are analyzing the physicochemical parameters that govern monomer-dimer equilibrium, ligand binding and operator recognition. Using oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis, we have generated a large collection of mutant proteins having single amino acid switches within a specific segment of TrpR (the so-called "D" helix) whose role in protein-DNA binding remains enigmatic. The effects of these switches on various properties of the protein are being studied in vivo and in vitro.E. coli cytoplasm contains several proteins that can interact with TrpR. The identity of these proteins and their functional roles are being pursued using biochemical, genetic, and immunochemical approaches.
Transcriptional Regulation by the TyrR Protein: The TyrR protein of E. coli is a homodimer having 513 amino acids per subunit. In concert with phenylalanine and tyrosine, this factor regulates transcription from at least eight promoters. Transcriptional regulation by the TyrR protein is complex and interesting, in that certain promoters (e.g. aroF) are sharply inhibited by the binding of a TyrR/ligand complex to an operator target, while other promoters (e.g. mtr,tpl) are stimulated by similar protein-DNA interactions. A third pattern of regulatory response is seen for the tyrP promoter, which is repressed when tyrosine is the ligand and induced when phenylalanine is supplied. To clarify how the TyrR protein mediates such diverse regulatory effects, we are conducting a series of biochemical, genetic, and structural studies aimed at
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