Abstract

Cyanobacteria, phototrophic organisms performing oxygenic photosynthesis, must adapt their metabolic processes to important environmental challenges, like those imposed by the succession of days and nights. Not surprisingly, certain regulatory proteins are found exclusively in this phylum. One of these unique proteins, PipX, provides a mechanistic link between signals of carbon/nitrogen and of energy, transduced by the signaling protein PII, and the control of gene expression by the global nitrogen regulator NtcA. PII, required for cell survival unless PipX is inactivated or downregulated, functions by protein–protein interactions with transcriptional regulators, transporters, and enzymes. PipX also functions by protein–protein interactions, and previous studies suggested the existence of additional interacting partners or included it into a relatively robust six-node synteny network with proteins apparently unrelated to the nitrogen regulation system. To investigate additional functions of PipX while providing a proof of concept for the recently developed cyanobacterial linkage network, here we analyzed the physical and regulatory interactions between PipX and an intriguing component of the PipX synteny network, the essential ribosome assembly GTPase EngA. The results provide additional insights into the functions of cyanobacterial EngA and of PipX, showing that PipX interacts with the GD1 domain of EngA in a guanosine diphosphate-dependent manner and interferes with EngA functions in Synechococcus elongatus at a low temperature, an environmentally relevant context. Therefore, this work expands the PipX interaction network and establishes a possible connection between nitrogen regulation and the translation machinery. We discuss a regulatory model integrating previous information on PII–PipX with the results presented in this work.

Highlights

  • Cyanobacteria, phototrophic organisms that perform oxygenic photosynthesis, constitute an ecologically important phylum that is responsible for the evolution of the oxygenic atmosphere and are the main contributors to marine primary production (Blank and Sánchez-Baracaldo, 2010)

  • Yeast three-hybrid searches with PipX–PII as bait resulted in the identification of the cyanobacterial transcriptional regulator PlmA as an interacting protein (Labella et al, 2016), while co-expression and synteny approaches functionally connected PipX with PipY, a conserved pyridoxal phosphate-binding protein involved in amino/keto acid and pyridoxal phosphate homeostasis (Labella et al, 2017, 2020a; Tremiño et al, 2017; Cantos et al, 2019)

  • For immunodetection of EngA in S. elongatus protein extracts, cells from liquid cultures were harvested at different times after addition of 1 mM IPTG and subsequently lysed as described in Labella et al (2016) using glass beads and a cell disruptor

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Cyanobacteria, phototrophic organisms that perform oxygenic photosynthesis, constitute an ecologically important phylum that is responsible for the evolution of the oxygenic atmosphere and are the main contributors to marine primary production (Blank and Sánchez-Baracaldo, 2010). Yeast three-hybrid searches with PipX–PII as bait resulted in the identification of the cyanobacterial transcriptional regulator PlmA as an interacting protein (Labella et al, 2016), while co-expression and synteny approaches functionally connected PipX with PipY, a conserved pyridoxal phosphate-binding protein involved in amino/keto acid and pyridoxal phosphate homeostasis (Labella et al, 2017, 2020a; Tremiño et al, 2017; Cantos et al, 2019) Given that in this phylum most signaling proteins are encoded in monocistronic units, we took the “guilty by association” principle one step further to look for genes that, independently of their operon structures, are closely associated with PipX in cyanobacterial genomes and may be functionally connected. In the light of these analyses, we propose a model for the regulation of EngA by the hubs of the nitrogen interaction network

MATERIALS AND METHODS
GGTTCCCATGGGACACCATCACCATCACCATATGGCTT CCGAG 3
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
A Model for PipX Regulation of EngA
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT
CONCLUDING REMARKS
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