Abstract

BackgroundTwo component regulatory systems are the primary form of signal transduction in bacteria. Although genomic binding sites have been determined for several eukaryotic and bacterial transcription factors, comprehensive identification of gene targets of two component response regulators remains challenging due to the lack of knowledge of the signals required for their activation. We focused our study on Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough, a sulfate reducing bacterium that encodes unusually diverse and largely uncharacterized two component signal transduction systems.ResultsWe report the first systematic mapping of the genes regulated by all transcriptionally acting response regulators in a single bacterium. Our results enabled functional predictions for several response regulators and include key processes of carbon, nitrogen and energy metabolism, cell motility and biofilm formation, and responses to stresses such as nitrite, low potassium and phosphate starvation. Our study also led to the prediction of new genes and regulatory networks, which found corroboration in a compendium of transcriptome data available for D. vulgaris. For several regulators we predicted and experimentally verified the binding site motifs, most of which were discovered as part of this study.ConclusionsThe gene targets identified for the response regulators allowed strong functional predictions to be made for the corresponding two component systems. By tracking the D. vulgaris regulators and their motifs outside the Desulfovibrio spp. we provide testable hypotheses regarding the functions of orthologous regulators in other organisms. The in vitro array based method optimized here is generally applicable for the study of such systems in all organisms.

Highlights

  • Two component regulatory systems are the primary form of signal transduction in bacteria

  • Gene targets were determined for 24 D. vulgaris Hildenborough RRs Activation of RRs and downstream effector function via two component systems are highly regulated events in vivo

  • Prior to our study, very little was known about the two component regulatory network in sulfate-reducing bacteria

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Summary

Introduction

Two component regulatory systems are the primary form of signal transduction in bacteria. We focused our study on Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough, a sulfate reducing bacterium that encodes unusually diverse and largely uncharacterized two component signal transduction systems. Signal transduction to sense and respond to environmental and intracellular changes governs key cellular regulatory functions. Two component systems, composed typically of a sensor histidine kinase (HK) and a response regulator (RR), are the primary and best-studied mechanisms for perceiving such changes and controlling downstream responses [1,2,3]. Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough, an anaerobic sulfate reducing bacterium, occupies a variety of ecological niches and encodes a strikingly large number of these systems with unusual diversity attributed to lineage-specific expansion of existing gene families [4]. The function of none of its two component systems, encoded by 72 RRs and 64 HKs, have been characterized to date

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