Abstract

Bacillus subtilis contains two known cyclic di-GMP (c-di-GMP)-dependent receptors, YdaK and DgrA, as well as three diguanylate cyclases (DGCs): soluble DgcP and membrane-integral DgcK and DgcW. DgrA regulates motility, while YdaK is responsible for the formation of a putative exopolysaccharide, dependent on the activity of DgcK. Using single-molecule tracking, we show that a majority of DgcK molecules are statically positioned in the cell membrane but significantly less so in the absence of YdaK but more so upon overproduction of YdaK. The soluble domains of DgcK and of YdaK show a direct interaction in vitro, which depends on an intact I-site within the degenerated GGDEF domain of YdaK. These experiments suggest a direct handover of a second messenger at a single subcellular site. Interestingly, all three DGC proteins contribute toward downregulation of motility via the PilZ protein DgrA. Deletion of dgrA also affects the mobility of DgcK within the membrane and also that of DgcP, which arrests less often at the membrane in the absence of DgrA. Both, DgcK and DgcP interact with DgrA in vitro, showing that divergent as well as convergent direct connections exist between cyclases and their effector proteins. Automated determination of molecule numbers in live cells revealed that DgcK and DgcP are present at very low copy numbers of 6 or 25 per cell, respectively, such that for DgcK, a part of the cell population does not contain any DgcK molecule, rendering signaling via c-di-GMP extremely efficient.IMPORTANCE Second messengers are free to diffuse through the cells and to activate all responsive elements. Cyclic di-GMP (c-di-GMP) signaling plays an important role in the determination of the life style transition between motility and sessility/biofilm formation but involves numerous distinct synthetases (diguanylate cyclases [DGCs]) or receptor pathways that appear to act in an independent manner. Using Bacillus subtilis as a model organism, we show that for two c-di-GMP pathways, DGCs and receptor molecules operate via direct interactions, where a synthesized dinucleotide appears to be directly used for the protein-protein interaction. We show that very few DGC molecules exist within cells; in the case of exopolysaccharide (EPS) formation via membrane protein DgcK, the DGC molecules act at a single site, setting up a single signaling pool within the cell membrane. Using single-molecule tracking, we show that the soluble DGC DgcP arrests at the cell membrane, interacting with its receptor, DgrA, which slows down motility. DgrA also directly binds to DgcK, showing that divergent as well as convergent modules exist in B. subtilis Thus, local-pool signal transduction operates extremely efficiently and specifically.

Highlights

  • IMPORTANCE Second messengers are free to diffuse through the cells and to activate all responsive elements

  • Membrane-integral cyclase DgcK has been shown to form clusters in the cell membrane, which can colocalize with the single YdaK/YdaNM cluster, indicating the close spatial proximity of c-di-GMP synthetase and its receptor [8]

  • We wished to strengthen the view that a close interaction exists between DgcK and YdaK by determining single-molecule dynamics of DgcK in the presence or absence of YdaK

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Summary

Introduction

IMPORTANCE Second messengers are free to diffuse through the cells and to activate all responsive elements. Spatially sequestering the signal (local pool) within multiprotein complexes at distinct cellular sites may result in highly specific signaling pathways Evidence for this idea has come from the identification (i) of direct interactions of a DGC and its receptor protein in the Gram-negative organism Pseudomonas fluorescens [6]; (ii) of a module of interacting DGCs, PDEs, and a DNA-binding protein acting as a signaling cascade in Escherichia coli [7]; and (iii) of single, distinct localization points of DGCs and of effector proteins in B. subtilis [8, 9]. The putative EPS synthase components YdaM/YdaN and YdaK colocalize to clusters predominantly at the cell poles and are statically positioned at this subcellular site, suggesting that exopolysaccharide production takes place at distinct sites of the membrane For this activity, the presence of YdaK and of DgcK is required, implying an involvement of the second messenger, c-di-GMP. It has been unclear which of the DGCs provides the signal for DgrA

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