Abstract

In line with the key role of methionine in protein biosynthesis initiation and many cellular processes most microorganisms have evolved mechanisms to synthesize methionine de novo. Here we demonstrate that, in the bacterial pathogen Staphylococcus aureus, a rare combination of stringent response-controlled CodY activity, T-box riboswitch and mRNA decay mechanisms regulate the synthesis and stability of methionine biosynthesis metICFE-mdh mRNA. In contrast to other Bacillales which employ S-box riboswitches to control methionine biosynthesis, the S. aureus metICFE-mdh mRNA is preceded by a 5′-untranslated met leader RNA harboring a T-box riboswitch. Interestingly, this T-box riboswitch is revealed to specifically interact with uncharged initiator formylmethionyl-tRNA (tRNAi fMet) while binding of elongator tRNAMet proved to be weak, suggesting a putative additional function of the system in translation initiation control. met leader RNA/metICFE-mdh operon expression is under the control of the repressor CodY which binds upstream of the met leader RNA promoter. As part of the metabolic emergency circuit of the stringent response, methionine depletion activates RelA-dependent (p)ppGpp alarmone synthesis, releasing CodY from its binding site and thereby activating the met leader promoter. Our data further suggest that subsequent steps in metICFE-mdh transcription are tightly controlled by the 5′ met leader-associated T-box riboswitch which mediates premature transcription termination when methionine is present. If methionine supply is limited, and hence tRNAi fMet becomes uncharged, full-length met leader/metICFE-mdh mRNA is transcribed which is rapidly degraded by nucleases involving RNase J2. Together, the data demonstrate that staphylococci have evolved special mechanisms to prevent the accumulation of excess methionine. We hypothesize that this strict control might reflect the limited metabolic capacities of staphylococci to reuse methionine as, other than Bacillus, staphylococci lack both the methionine salvage and polyamine synthesis pathways. Thus, methionine metabolism might represent a metabolic Achilles' heel making the pathway an interesting target for future anti-staphylococcal drug development.

Highlights

  • Staphylococci are important skin and mucosa commensals and major human pathogens

  • The staphylococcal met leader RNA interacts with initiator formylmethionyl-tRNA

  • We show that methionine biosynthesis control in S. aureus involves a T-box riboswitch

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Staphylococci are important skin and mucosa commensals and major human pathogens. We investigate the regulation of methionine biosynthesis in staphylococci. In silico analysis predicts the presence of a T-box riboswitch in the 59-untranslated region of the methionine biosynthesis operon (metICFE-mdh operon) in staphylococci [5,6,8], suggesting the use of alternative mechanisms to regulate methionine synthesis. T-box riboswitches are transcriptional control systems which have been extensively studied in Bacillus subtilis and other Firmicutes (reviewed in [6]). Their function is controlled by specific interactions and differential binding to charged and uncharged cognate tRNA, respectively, Author Summary

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