Function
Arginine repressor (ArgR) is a prokaryotic repressor which regulates the arginine deiminase pathway. In this pathway, arginine is metabolized to form ammonia, CO2 and ATP. The ArgR releases the expression of the arginine deiminase pathway in the presence of arginine. The genes controlled by ArgR are not found in a single operon. While repressors are usually active as dimers, ArgR is a hexamer and binds to 2 palindromic DNA sites called ARG box in its N terminal domain.[1]
Structural highlights
The structure of ArgR shows a DNA-binding domain at the acidic N-terminal and a basic C-terminal domain which contains the and the . Every Arg ligand interacts .[2]
3D structures of arginine repressor
Arginine repressor 3D structures