Abstract

Chronic pulmonary infections in those living with cystic fibrosis or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease are promoted by production of alginate by the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Alginate biosynthesis enzymes in P. aeruginosa are regulated by the extracytoplasmic function alternative sigma factor σ22 either by mutation in mucA or in response to envelope stress. An intergenic region between ORFs PA2559 and PA2560 in P. aeruginosa is σ22-dependent and its transcription is activated by cell wall stress. This stress-responsive transcript encodes a novel stress response facilitator, SrfA, that is exclusively conserved only in P. aeruginosa species. Here we report the first three-dimensional structure of SrfA determined by molecular replacement using fold prediction to generate a search model. The SrfA structure adopts a helix-loop-helix fold that shares some similarity with structures of anti-activator or effector proteins. A ΔsrfA mutant strain of P. aeruginosa PAO1 exhibited significantly reduced biofilm formation, which was restored to wild-type levels when ΔsrfA was complemented with srfA. The ΔsrfA strain also exhibited increased sensitivity to macrolide antibiotics. We further show using MicroScale Thermophoresis that SrfA interacts with both PA2559 and PA2560 with high affinity. This work provides a starting point for further investigation into the role of SrfA in response to cell wall stress.

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