OccR is a LysR-type transcriptional regulator of Agrobacterium tumefaciens that positively regulates the octopine catabolism operon of the Ti plasmid and is also an autorepressor. Positive control of the occ genes occurs in response to octopine, a nutrient released from crown gall tumors. OccR binds to a site upstream of the occQ promoter in the presence and absence of octopine. Octopine causes prebound OccR to undergo a conformational change at the DNA binding site that causes changes in footprint length and DNA bending. To determine the roles of these conformational changes in transcriptional activation, we isolated 22 OccR mutants that were able to activate the occQ promoter in the absence of octopine. Thirteen of these mutants contained single amino acid substitutions, and nine contained two base pair changes resulting in two amino acid substitutions, which in most cases acted synergistically. These mutations spanned the entire length of the protein. Most of these mutant proteins in the absence of octopine displayed DNA binding and bending properties characteristic of transcriptionally active OccR-octopine complexes.