Abstract

Cyanobacteria, phototrophic organisms that perform oxygenic photosynthesis, perceive nitrogen status by sensing 2-oxoglutarate levels. PII, a widespread signaling protein, senses and transduces nitrogen and energy status to target proteins, regulating metabolism and gene expression. In cyanobacteria, under conditions of low 2-oxoglutarate, PII forms complexes with the enzyme N-acetyl glutamate kinase, increasing arginine biosynthesis, and with PII-interacting protein X (PipX), making PipX unavailable for binding and co-activation of the nitrogen regulator NtcA. Both the PII-PipX complex structure and in vivo functional data suggested that this complex, as such, could have regulatory functions in addition to PipX sequestration. To investigate this possibility we performed yeast three-hybrid screening of genomic libraries from Synechococcus elongatus PCC7942, searching for proteins interacting simultaneously with PII and PipX. The only prey clone found in the search expressed PlmA, a member of the GntR family of transcriptional regulators proven here by gel filtration to be homodimeric. Interactions analyses further confirmed the simultaneous requirement of PII and PipX, and showed that the PlmA contacts involve PipX elements exposed in the PII-PipX complex, specifically the C-terminal helices and one residue of the tudor-like body. In contrast, PII appears not to interact directly with PlmA, possibly being needed indirectly, to induce an extended conformation of the C-terminal helices of PipX and for modulating the surface polarity at the PII-PipX boundary, two elements that appear crucial for PlmA binding. Attempts to inactive plmA confirmed that this gene is essential in S. elongatus. Western blot assays revealed that S. elongatus PlmA, irrespective of the nitrogen regime, is a relatively abundant transcriptional regulator, suggesting the existence of a large PlmA regulon. In silico studies showed that PlmA is universally and exclusively found in cyanobacteria. Based on interaction data, on the relative amounts of the proteins involved in PII-PipX-PlmA complexes, determined in western assays, and on the restrictions imposed by the symmetries of trimeric PII and dimeric PlmA molecules, a structural and regulatory model for PlmA function is discussed in the context of the cyanobacterial nitrogen interaction network.

Highlights

  • Cyanobacteria are phototrophic organisms that perform oxygenic photosynthesis and require the assimilation of ammonia for autotrophic growth

  • Novel interactions mediated by PII and PII-interacting protein X (PipX) in cyanobacteria may provide a rationale for non-understood observations, including the need of PII for viability of S. elongatus at relatively low carbon to nitrogen rations (Chang et al, 2013) and the involvement of PipX in transcriptional regulation of cells grown in the presence of ammonium or nitrate (Espinosa et al, 2014)

  • Subsequent characterization of PII-N-acetyl-Lglutamate kinase (NAGK), PII-PipX and NtcA-PipX complexes in S. elongatus and other organisms benefited from two-hybrid approaches (Llácer et al, 2007, 2010; Zhao et al, 2010)

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

Cyanobacteria are phototrophic organisms that perform oxygenic photosynthesis and require the assimilation of ammonia for autotrophic growth. Novel interactions mediated by PII and PipX in cyanobacteria may provide a rationale for non-understood observations, including the need of PII for viability of S. elongatus at relatively low carbon to nitrogen rations (Chang et al, 2013) and the involvement of PipX in transcriptional regulation of cells grown in the presence of ammonium or nitrate (Espinosa et al, 2014). In this work we searched for S. elongatus proteins interacting with PII-PipX complexes and identified PlmA, a poorly known regulator despite constituting one subfamily of the widely distributed GntR-like family (Hoskisson and Rigali, 2009), characterized by a conserved N-terminal winged helix-turnhelix (HTH) DNA-binding domain (Rigali et al, 2002; Zheng et al, 2009; Suvorova et al, 2015) and a diverse C-terminal dimerization/ligand-binding domain. Insights into the significance of this finding were obtained by investigating (a) the specificity of the PII-PipX-PlmA interaction, (b) the molecular determinants of PII and PipX proteins involved in interactions with PlmA, (c) the quaternary structure of PlmA, (d) the importance of PlmA in S. elongatus (e) the in vivo levels of PlmA in relation to interaction partners PipX and PII and (f) the phylogenetic distribution and idiosyncrasy of PlmA

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Computational Methods
Other Methods
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call