The expression of arginine metabolism in Lactococcus lactis is controlled by the two homologous transcriptional regulators ArgR and AhrC. Genome sequence analyses have shown that the occurrence of multiple homologues of the ArgR family of transcriptional regulators is a common feature of many low-G ؉ C Gram-positive bacteria. Detailed studies of ArgR type regulators have previously only been carried out in bacteria containing single regulators. Here, we present a first characterization of the two L. lactis arginine regulators by means of gel retardation and DNase I footprinting. ArgR of L. lactis was shown to bind to the promoter regions of both the arginine biosynthetic argCJDBF operon and the arginine catabolic arcABD1C1C2TD2yvaD operon, but in an arginine-independent manner. Surprisingly, AhrC alone was unable to bind to DNA. Arginine-dependent DNA binding was obtained by mixing the two regulators in gel retardation assays. With both regulators present, the addition of arginine led to increased binding of ArgR-AhrC to the biosynthetic argC promoter but also to diminished binding to the catabolic arcA promoter. Footprinting showed ArgR-AhrC protection of regions containing ARG box operator sequences preceding argC. In the absence of AhrC, ArgR protected sites in the arcA promoter region with similarity to ARG box half-sites, here called ARC boxes. We propose a model for repression of arginine biosynthesis and activation of catabolism by anti-repression, involving arginine-dependent interaction between the two L. lactis regulator proteins, ArgR and AhrC.Despite differences in the organization of genes involved in arginine metabolism, experimental evidence indicates that the mechanism of arginine-dependent regulation of these genes is highly conserved among a range of different organisms, including Gram-negative, Gram-positive and extremophilic bacteria (1-12). Regulation is exerted by binding of single transcriptional regulators of the ArgR family to so-called ARG operator sites preceding the relevant target genes, generally leading to repression of arginine biosynthetic genes and activation of catabolic genes, in the presence of arginine.Crystal structures of the ArgR type transcriptional regulators of Escherichia coli (ArgREc (13, 14)), Bacillus stearothermophilus (ArgRBst (15)), and Bacillus subtilis (AhrCBsu (16)) have revealed these to be structurally similar proteins, making up a complex of six identical subunits. The subunits are arranged in hexameric structures, which are organized as dimers of trimers. In E. coli and B. subtilis, the hexameric structure is maintained both in the absence and presence of arginine (4, 17), whereas the regulator of B. stearothermophilus mainly exists as a trimer that assembles into hexamers dependent of the concentrations of arginine, protein, and DNA (5, 15). Six arginine molecules are bound at the trimer-trimer interface, strengthening the interaction between the trimers and at the same time introducing a conformational change in the regulator, thus increasing its affini...