Abstract

Magnesium is an essential divalent metal that serves many cellular functions. While most divalent cations are maintained at relatively low intracellular concentrations, magnesium is maintained at a higher level (∼0.5–2.0 mM). Three families of transport proteins were previously identified for magnesium import: CorA, MgtE, and MgtA/MgtB P-type ATPases. In the current study, we find that expression of a bacterial protein unrelated to these transporters can fully restore growth to a bacterial mutant that lacks known magnesium transporters, suggesting it is a new importer for magnesium. We demonstrate that this transport activity is likely to be specific rather than resulting from substrate promiscuity because the proteins are incapable of manganese import. This magnesium transport protein is distantly related to the Nramp family of proteins, which have been shown to transport divalent cations but have never been shown to recognize magnesium. We also find gene expression of the new magnesium transporter to be controlled by a magnesium-sensing riboswitch. Importantly, we find additional examples of riboswitch-regulated homologues, suggesting that they are a frequent occurrence in bacteria. Therefore, our aggregate data discover a new and perhaps broadly important path for magnesium import and highlight how identification of riboswitch RNAs can help shed light on new, and sometimes unexpected, functions of their downstream genes.

Highlights

  • Metal ions are essential and serve many cellular purposes, including functioning as cofactors for numerous metalloenzymes

  • Three classes of bacterial proteins (CorA, MgtE and MgtA/ B) have previously been identified for transport of the ion. This current study introduces a new route of magnesium import, which, is unexpectedly provided by proteins distantly related to Natural resistance-associated macrophage proteins (Nramp)

  • Nramp metal transporters are widespread in the three domains of life; most are assumed to function as transporters of transition metals such as manganese or iron

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Summary

Introduction

Metal ions are essential and serve many cellular purposes, including functioning as cofactors for numerous metalloenzymes. The latter are responsible for a diverse array of biochemical reactions and, together, comprise one third of all cellular proteins [1,2,3]. Mutational disruption of the gene results in increased susceptibility to infection by intracellular pathogens [7,8,9]. This suggests that deprivation of essential metals is a strategy used by hosts for compromising the phagosome as a niche for bacterial growth and replication.

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