Abstract

Two-component systems constitute phosphotransfer signaling pathways and enable adaptation to environmental changes, an essential feature for bacterial survival. The general stress response (GSR) in the plant-protecting alphaproteobacterium Sphingomonas melonis Fr1 involves a two-component system consisting of multiple stress-sensing histidine kinases (Paks) and the response regulator PhyR; PhyR in turn regulates the alternative sigma factor EcfG, which controls expression of the GSR regulon. While Paks had been shown to phosphorylate PhyR in vitro, it remained unclear if and under which conditions direct phosphorylation happens in the cell, as Paks also phosphorylate the single domain response regulator SdrG, an essential yet enigmatic component of the GSR signaling pathway. Here, we analyze the role of SdrG and investigate an alternative function of the membrane-bound PhyP (here re-designated PhyT), previously assumed to act as a PhyR phosphatase. In vitro assays show that PhyT transfers a phosphoryl group from SdrG to PhyR via phosphoryl transfer on a conserved His residue. This finding, as well as complementary GSR reporter assays, indicate the participation of SdrG and PhyT in a Pak-SdrG-PhyT-PhyR phosphorelay. Furthermore, we demonstrate complex formation between PhyT and PhyR. This finding is substantiated by PhyT-dependent membrane association of PhyR in unstressed cells, while the response regulator is released from the membrane upon stress induction. Our data support a model in which PhyT sequesters PhyR, thereby favoring Pak-dependent phosphorylation of SdrG. In addition, PhyT assumes the role of the SdrG-phosphotransferase to activate PhyR. Our results place SdrG into the GSR signaling cascade and uncover a dual role of PhyT in the GSR.

Highlights

  • Two-component regulatory pathways enable bacteria to react to changing environmental conditions

  • The general stress response (GSR) in alphaproteobacteria represents an essential feature for survival in stressful, constantly changing habitats

  • A variety of stresses are sensed by GSR-activating histidine kinases and lead to multiple stress resistance via the response

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Summary

Introduction

Two-component regulatory pathways enable bacteria to react to changing environmental conditions. Multicomponent phosphorelays represent more complex two-component systems involving either a so-called hybrid histidine kinase or, alternatively, a single domain response regulator (SDRR) which can be phosphorylated by multiple histidine kinases. The general stress response (GSR) is pivotal for alphaproteobacteria for environmental adaption and host microbe interactions [9, 10] It connects a two-component system to alternative sigma-factor regulation [11, 12]. In the plant-protecting S. melonis Fr1 [22, 23], seven cytoplasmic histidine kinases (Paks) are involved in the GSR [19] They belong to the HWE/HisKA_2 family [19, 24], encoding the HRxxN motif in their DHp domain. The Paks do phosphorylate PhyR (in the presence of NepR), and the SDRR SdrG [19]

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