Abstract

The stringent response (SR) is a highly conserved stress response in bacteria. It is composed of two factors, (i) a nucleotide alarmone, guanosine tetra- and pentaphosphate ((p)ppGpp), and (ii) an RNA polymerase-binding protein, DksA, that regulates various phenotypes, including bacterial virulence. The clinically significant opportunistic bacterial pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa possesses two genes, dksA1 and dksA2, that encode DksA proteins. It remains elusive, however, which of these two genes plays a more important role in SR regulation. In this work, we compared genome-wide, RNA-Seq-based transcriptome profiles of ΔdksA1, ΔdksA2, and ΔdksA1ΔdksA2 mutants to globally assess the effects of these gene deletions on transcript levels coupled with phenotypic analyses. The ΔdksA1 mutant exhibited substantial defects in a wide range of phenotypes, including quorum sensing (QS), anaerobiosis, and motility, whereas the ΔdksA2 mutant exhibited no significant phenotypic changes, suggesting that the dksA2 gene may not have an essential function in P. aeruginosa under the conditions used here. Of note, the ΔdksA1 mutants displayed substantially increased transcription of genes involved in polyamine biosynthesis, and we also detected increased polyamine levels in these mutants. Because SAM is a shared precursor for the production of both QS autoinducers and polyamines, these findings suggest that DksA1 deficiency skews the flow of SAM toward polyamine production rather than to QS signaling. Together, our results indicate that DksA1, but not DksA2, controls many important phenotypes in P. aeruginosa We conclude that DksA1 may represent a potential target whose inhibition may help manage recalcitrant P. aeruginosa infections.

Highlights

  • The stringent response (SR) is a highly conserved stress response in bacteria

  • DksA1 acts as a global transcriptional regulator in P. aeruginosa

  • Because the formation of biofilm depends on motility, we evaluated the effects of the dksA1 and/or dksA2 mutations on P. aeruginosa biofilm formation

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Summary

Introduction

The stringent response (SR) is a highly conserved stress response in bacteria. It is composed of two factors, (i) a nucleotide alarmone, guanosine tetra- and pentaphosphate ((p)ppGpp), and (ii) an RNA polymerase-binding protein, DksA, that regulates various phenotypes, including bacterial virulence. Pyocyanin production was re-implemented by the expression of dksA2 in a P. aeruginosa ⌬dksA1 mutant. To investigate the effects of disruptions in the dksA1 and/or dksA2 genes in P. aeruginosa, transcriptomes of ⌬dksA1, ⌬dksA2, and ⌬dksA1⌬dksA2 mutants were compared with that of the parental strain PAO1 by RNA-Seq. The row Z-score of the differential expression was calculated by processing RPKM values of targeted genes and is represented as a color-coded box in heat maps (Fig. 1A).

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