Identification and Characterization of two nitrogen fixation regulatory regions, nifA and nfrX, in Azotobacter vinelandii and Azotobacter chroococcum

Abstract
Five Tn5-induced Nif mutants of Azotobacter vinelandii were characterized as regulatory mutants because they were restored to Nif+ by the introduction of constitutively expressed nifA from Klebsiella pneumoniae. The mutants fell into two different classes on the basis of hybridization to a Rhizobium leguminosarum nifA gene probe and by complementation with cosmids isolated from pLAFRI gene banks of A.vineiandii and Azotobacter chroococcum. One mutant, MV3, was located in or near a nifA gene. The others, MV12, MV16, MV18 and MV26, defined a new regulatory gene, which has been called nfrX. The lack of expression of different nif-lacZ fusions confirmed the regulatory phenotype of all five mutant strains. The ability of both nifA and nfrX mutants to grow on nitrogen-free medium with vanadium, but not on medium with molybdenum, suggests that neither gene is required for expression of the alternative V-containing nitrogenase of A. vinelandii. A fragment carrying Tn5 and flanking DNA from MV3 was used as a probe to isolate the nifA region of A. chroococcum. Ligation of two adjacent EcoRI fragments of A. chroococcum yielded an intact nifA gene that activated expression of nifH-lac fusions and also restored MV3 to Nif+. The four nfrX mutants were complemented by pLAFRI cosmids pLV163 and pLCI 21. The nfrX gene was subcloned from pLV163 and located within a 3.2 kb fragment. To determine whether nfrX might be found in other nitrogen-fixing organisms, DNA from 13 different species was hybridized to an nfrX probe. The failure to observe hybridization suggests that nfrX may be specific to nif regulation in Azotobacter.