Abstract

The Salmonella enterica SseK1 protein is a type three secretion system effector that glycosylates host proteins during infection on specific arginine residues with N-acetyl glucosamine (GlcNAc). SseK1 also Arg-glycosylates endogenous bacterial proteins and we thus hypothesized that SseK1 activities might be integrated with regulating the intrabacterial abundance of UPD-GlcNAc, the sugar-nucleotide donor used by this effector. After searching for new SseK1 substrates, we found that SseK1 glycosylates arginine residues in the dual repressor-activator protein NagC, leading to increased DNA-binding affinity and enhanced expression of the NagC-regulated genes glmU and glmS. SseK1 also glycosylates arginine residues in GlmR, a protein that enhances GlmS activity. This Arg-glycosylation improves the ability of GlmR to enhance GlmS activity. We also discovered that NagC is a direct activator of glmR expression. Salmonella lacking SseK1 produce significantly reduced amounts of UDP-GlcNAc as compared with Salmonella expressing SseK1. Overall, we conclude that SseK1 up-regulates UDP-GlcNAc synthesis both by enhancing the DNA-binding activity of NagC and by increasing GlmS activity through GlmR glycosylation. Such regulatory activities may have evolved to maintain sufficient levels of UDP-GlcNAc for both bacterial cell wall precursors and for SseK1 to modify other bacterial and host targets in response to environmental changes and during infection.

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