Abstract

The heat-shock response, a universal protective mechanism consisting of a transcriptional reprogramming of the cellular transcriptome, results in the accumulation of proteins which counteract the deleterious effects of heat-stress on cellular polypeptides. To quickly respond to thermal stress and trigger the heat-shock response, bacteria rely on different mechanisms to detect temperature variations, which can involve nearly all classes of biological molecules. In Campylobacter jejuni the response to heat-shock is transcriptionally controlled by a regulatory circuit involving two repressors, HspR and HrcA. In the present work we show that the heat-shock repressor HrcA acts as an intrinsic protein thermometer. We report that a temperature upshift up to 42 °C negatively affects HrcA DNA-binding activity to a target promoter, a condition required for de-repression of regulated genes. Furthermore, we show that this impairment of HrcA binding at 42 °C is irreversible in vitro, as DNA-binding was still not restored by reversing the incubation temperature to 37 °C. On the other hand, we demonstrate that the DNA-binding activity of HspR, which controls, in combination with HrcA, the transcription of chaperones’ genes, is unaffected by heat-stress up to 45 °C, portraying this master repressor as a rather stable protein. Additionally, we show that HrcA binding activity is enhanced by the chaperonin GroE, upon direct protein–protein interaction. In conclusion, the results presented in this work establish HrcA as a novel example of intrinsic heat-sensing transcriptional regulator, whose DNA-binding activity is positively modulated by the GroE chaperonin.

Highlights

  • All living organisms are continuously challenged by several stress factors, which represent an obstacle to life and threaten their survival

  • It consists of a transcriptional reprogramming of cellular transcriptome, mainly finalized to the accumulation of protective proteins, collectively named heat-shock proteins (HSP), which counteract the deleterious effects of heat-shock on cellular polypeptides [2]

  • We show for the first time that in C. jejuni the HrcA repressor is the intrinsic heat-sensor of the heat-shock regulatory circuit

Read more

Summary

Introduction

All living organisms are continuously challenged by several stress factors, which represent an obstacle to life and threaten their survival. Among the different environmental insults, a temperature increase only moderately above the organism optimum growth condition poses a major threat, leading to cell damage or death. A sudden increase of environmental temperature leads to several damaging processes, including unfolding and aggregation of cellular proteins. To avoid the disruption of protein homeostasis (proteostasis), all living organisms have evolved a fundamental protective mechanism known as heat-shock response [1]. It consists of a transcriptional reprogramming of cellular transcriptome, mainly finalized to the accumulation of protective proteins, collectively named heat-shock proteins (HSP), which counteract the deleterious effects of heat-shock on cellular polypeptides [2]. The heat-shock response relies on sophisticated regulatory mechanisms, which guarantee a precise control of HSP amount inside the cell

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
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