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1.
In Vibrio cholerae, the second messenger bis‐(3′?5′)‐cyclic dimeric guanosine monophosphate (c‐di‐GMP) increases exopolysaccharides production and biofilm formation and decreases virulence and motility. As such, c‐di‐GMP is considered an important player in the transition from the host to persistence in the environment. c‐di‐GMP level is regulated through a complex network of more than 60 chromosomal genes encoding predicted diguanylate cyclases (DGCs) and phosphodiesterases. Herein we report the characterization of two additional DGCs, DgcK and DgcL, encoded by integrating conjugative elements (ICEs) belonging to the SXT/R391 family. SXT/R391 ICEs are self‐transmissible mobile elements that are widespread among vibrios and several species of enterobacteria. We found that deletion of dgcL increases the motility of V. cholerae, that overexpression of DgcK or DgcL modulates gene expression, biofilm formation and bacterial motility, and that a single amino acid change in the active site of either enzyme abolishes these phenotypes. We also show that DgcK and DgcL are able to synthesize c‐di‐GMP in vitro from GTP. DgcK was found to co‐purify with non‐covalently bound flavin mononucleotide (FMN). DgcL's enzymatic activity was augmented upon phosphorylation of its phosphorylatable response‐regulator domain suggesting that DgcL is part of a two‐component signal transduction system. Interestingly, we found orthologues of dgcK and dgcL in several SXT/R391 ICEs from two species of Vibrio originating from Asia, Africa and Central America. We propose that besides conferring usual antibiotic resistances, dgcKL‐bearing SXT/R391 ICEs could enhance the survival of vibrios in aquatic environments by increasing c‐di‐GMP level.  相似文献   

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The c‐di‐GMP‐binding effector protein FlgZ has been demonstrated to control motility in the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa and it was suggested that c‐di‐GMP‐bound FlgZ impedes motility via its interaction with the MotCD stator. To further understand how motility is downregulated in P. aeruginosa and to elucidate the general control mechanisms operating during bacterial growth, we examined the spatiotemporal activity of FlgZ. We re‐annotated the P. aeruginosaflgZ open reading frame and demonstrated that FlgZ‐mediated downregulation of motility is fine‐tuned via three independent mechanisms. First, we found that flgZ gene is transcribed independently from flgMN in stationary growth phase to increase FlgZ protein levels in the cell. Second, FlgZ localizes to the cell pole upon c‐di‐GMP binding and third, we describe that FimV, a cell pole anchor protein, is involved in increasing the polar localized c‐di‐GMP bound FlgZ to inhibit both, swimming and swarming motility. Our results shed light on the complex dynamics and spatiotemporal control of c‐di‐GMP‐dependent bacterial motility phenotypes and on how the polar anchor protein FimV, the motor brake FlgZ and the stator proteins function to repress flagella‐driven swimming and swarming motility.  相似文献   

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The major sessility‐motility lifestyle change and additional fundamental aspects of bacterial physiology, behaviour and morphology are regulated by the secondary messenger cyclic di‐GMP (c‐di‐GMP). Although the c‐di‐GMP metabolizing enzymes and many receptors have been readily characterized upon discovery, the HD‐GYP domain c‐di‐GMP phosphodiesterase family remained underinvestigated. In this issue of Molecular Microbiology, Bellini et al. provide an important step towards functional and structural characterization of the previously neglected HD‐GYP domain family by resolving the crystal structure of PmGH, a catalytically active family member from the thermophilic bacterium Persephonella marina. The crystal structure revealed a novel tri‐nuclear catalytic iron centre involved in c‐di‐GMP binding and catalysis and provides the structural basis to subsequently characterize in detail the catalytic mechanism of hydrolysis of c‐di‐GMP to GMP by HD‐GYP domains.  相似文献   

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Elevated levels of the second messenger cyclic dimeric GMP, c‐di‐GMP, promote transition of bacteria from single motile cells to surface‐attached multicellular communities. Here we describe a post‐translational mechanism by which c‐di‐GMP initiates this transition in enteric bacteria. High levels of c‐di‐GMP induce the counterclockwise bias in Escherichia coli flagellar rotation, which results in smooth swimming. Based on co‐immunoprecipitation, two‐hybrid and mutational analyses, the E. coli c‐di‐GMP receptor YcgR binds to the FliG subunit of the flagellum switch complex, and the YcgR–FliG interaction is strengthened by c‐di‐GMP. The central fragment of FliG binds to YcgR as well as to FliM, suggesting that YcgR–c‐di‐GMP biases flagellum rotation by altering FliG‐FliM interactions. The c‐di‐GMP‐induced smooth swimming promotes trapping of motile bacteria in semi‐solid media and attachment of liquid‐grown bacteria to solid surfaces, whereas c‐di‐GMP‐dependent mechanisms not involving YcgR further facilitate surface attachment. The YcgR–FliG interaction is conserved in the enteric bacteria, and the N‐terminal YcgR/PilZN domain of YcgR is required for this interaction. YcgR joins a growing list of proteins that regulate motility via the FliG subunit of the flagellum switch complex, which suggests that FliG is a common regulatory entryway that operates in parallel with the chemotaxis that utilizes the FliM‐entryway.  相似文献   

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c‐di‐GMP is a bacterial second messenger that is enzymatically synthesized and degraded in response to environmental signals. Cellular processes are affected when c‐di‐GMP binds to receptors which include proteins that contain the PilZ domain. Although each c‐di‐GMP synthesis or degradation enzyme metabolizes the same molecule, many of these enzymes can be linked to specific downstream processes. Here we present evidence that c‐di‐GMP signalling specificity is achieved through differences in affinities of receptor macromolecules. We show that the PilZ domain proteins of Salmonella Typhimurium, YcgR and BcsA, demonstrate a 43‐fold difference in their affinity for c‐di‐GMP. Modulation of the affinities of these proteins altered their activities in a predictable manner in vivo. Inactivation of yhjH, which encodes a predicted c‐di‐GMP degrading enzyme, increased the fraction of the cellular population that demonstrated c‐di‐GMP levels high enough to bind to the higher‐affinity YcgR protein and inhibit motility, but not high enough to bind to the lower‐affinity BcsA protein and stimulate cellulose production. Finally, PilZ domain proteins of Pseudomonas aeruginosa demonstrated a 145‐fold difference in binding affinities, suggesting that regulation by binding affinity may be a conserved mechanism that allows organisms with many c‐di‐GMP binding macromolecules to rapidly integrate multiple environmental signals into one output.  相似文献   

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Bis‐(3′,5′) cyclic di‐guanylate (c‐di‐GMP) is a key bacterial second messenger that is implicated in the regulation of many crucial processes that include biofilm formation, motility and virulence. Cellular levels of c‐di‐GMP are controlled through synthesis by GGDEF domain diguanylate cyclases and degradation by two classes of phosphodiesterase with EAL or HD‐GYP domains. Here, we have determined the structure of an enzymatically active HD‐GYP domain protein from Persephonella marina (PmGH) alone, in complex with substrate (c‐di‐GMP) and final reaction product (GMP). The structures reveal a novel trinuclear iron binding site, which is implicated in catalysis and identify residues involved in recognition of c‐di‐GMP. This structure completes the picture of all domains involved in c‐di‐GMP metabolism and reveals that the HD‐GYP family splits into two distinct subgroups containing bi‐ and trinuclear metal centres.  相似文献   

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Biofilm formation can be considered a bacterial virulence mechanism. In a range of Gram‐negatives, increased levels of the second messenger cyclic diguanylate (c‐di‐GMP) promotes biofilm formation and reduces motility. Other bacterial processes known to be regulated by c‐di‐GMP include cell division, differentiation and virulence. Among Gram‐positive bacteria, where the function of c‐di‐GMP signalling is less well characterized, c‐di‐GMP was reported to regulate swarming motility in Bacillus subtilis while having very limited or no effect on biofilm formation. In contrast, we show that in the Bacillus cereus group c‐di‐GMP signalling is linked to biofilm formation, and to several other phenotypes important to the lifestyle of these bacteria. The Bacillus thuringiensis 407 genome encodes eleven predicted proteins containing domains (GGDEF/EAL) related to c‐di‐GMP synthesis or breakdown, ten of which are conserved through the majority of clades of the B. cereus group, including Bacillus anthracis. Several of the genes were shown to affect biofilm formation, motility, enterotoxin synthesis and/or sporulation. Among these, cdgF appeared to encode a master diguanylate cyclase essential for biofilm formation in an oxygenated environment. Only two cdg genes (cdgA, cdgJ) had orthologs in B. subtilis, highlighting differences in c‐di‐GMP signalling between B. subtilis and B. cereus group bacteria.  相似文献   

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Many bacteria colonize surfaces and transition to a sessile mode of growth. The plant pathogen Agrobacterium tumefaciens produces a u nip olar p olysaccharide (UPP) adhesin at single cell poles that contact surfaces. Here we report that elevated levels of the intracellular signal cyclic diguanosine monophosphate (c‐di‐GMP) lead to surface‐contact‐independent UPP production and a red colony phenotype due to production of UPP and the exopolysaccharide cellulose, when A. tumefaciens is incubated with the polysaccharide stain Congo Red. Transposon mutations with elevated Congo Red staining identified presumptive UPP‐negative regulators, mutants for which were hyperadherent, producing UPP irrespective of surface contact. Multiple independent mutations were obtained in visN and visR, activators of flagellar motility in A. tumefaciens, now found to inhibit UPP and cellulose production. Expression analysis in a visR mutant and isolation of suppressor mutations, identified three diguanylate cyclases inhibited by VisR. Null mutations for two of these genes decrease attachment and UPP production, but do not alter cellular c‐di‐GMP levels. However, analysis of catalytic site mutants revealed their GGDEF motifs are required to increase UPP production and surface attachment. Mutations in a specific presumptive c‐di‐GMP phosphodiesterase also elevate UPP production and attachment, consistent with c‐di‐GMP activation of surface‐dependent adhesin deployment.  相似文献   

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In contrast to numerous enzymes involved in c‐di‐GMP synthesis and degradation in enterobacteria, only a handful of c‐di‐GMP receptors/effectors have been identified. In search of new c‐di‐GMP receptors, we screened the Escherichia coli ASKA overexpression gene library using the Differential Radial Capillary Action of Ligand Assay (DRaCALA) with fluorescently and radioisotope‐labelled c‐di‐GMP. We uncovered three new candidate c‐di‐GMP receptors in E. coli and characterized one of them, BcsE. The bcsE gene is encoded in cellulose synthase operons in representatives of Gammaproteobacteria and Betaproteobacteria. The purified BcsE proteins from E. coli, Salmonella enterica and Klebsiella pneumoniae bind c‐di‐GMP via the domain of unknown function, DUF2819, which is hereby designated GIL, G GDEF I ‐site l ike domain. The RxGD motif of the GIL domain is required for c‐di‐GMP binding, similar to the c‐di‐GMP‐binding I‐site of the diguanylate cyclase GGDEF domain. Thus, GIL is the second protein domain, after PilZ, dedicated to c‐di‐GMP‐binding. We show that in S. enterica, BcsE is not essential for cellulose synthesis but is required for maximal cellulose production, and that c‐di‐GMP binding is critical for BcsE function. It appears that cellulose production in enterobacteria is controlled by a two‐tiered c‐di‐GMP‐dependent system involving BcsE and the PilZ domain containing glycosyltransferase BcsA.  相似文献   

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Bacterial biofilms are multicellular aggregates encased in an extracellular matrix mainly composed of exopolysaccharides (EPSs), protein and nucleic acids, which determines the architecture of the biofilm. Erwinia amylovora Ea1189 forms a biofilm inside the xylem of its host, which results in vessel plugging and water transport impairment. The production of the EPSs amylovoran and levan is critical for the formation of a mature biofilm. In addition, cyclic dimeric GMP (c‐di‐GMP) has been reported to positively regulate amylovoran biosynthesis and biofilm formation in E. amylovora Ea1189. In this study, we demonstrate that cellulose is synthesized by E. amylovora Ea1189 and is a major modulator of the three‐dimensional characteristics of biofilms formed by this bacterium, and also contributes to virulence during systemic host invasion. In addition, we demonstrate that the activation of cellulose biosynthesis in E. amylovora is a c‐di‐GMP‐dependent process, through allosteric binding to the cellulose catalytic subunit BcsA. We also report that the endoglucanase BcsZ is a key player in c‐di‐GMP activation of cellulose biosynthesis. Our results provide evidence of the complex composition of the extracellular matrix produced by E. amylovora and the implications of cellulose biosynthesis in shaping the architecture of the biofilm and in the expression of one of the main virulence phenotypes of this pathogen.  相似文献   

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