Genetic reductionist approach for dissecting individual roles of GGDEF proteins within the c-di-GMP signaling network in Salmonella
Date
2009Author
Version
Acceso abierto / Sarbide irekia
Type
Artículo / Artikulua
Version
Versión publicada / Argitaratu den bertsioa
Impact
|
10.1073/pnas.0812573106
Abstract
Bacteria have developed an exclusive signal transduction system
involving multiple diguanylate cyclase and phosphodiesterase
domain-containing proteins (GGDEF and EAL/HD-GYP, respectively)
that modulate the levels of the same diffusible molecule,
3 -5 -cyclic diguanylic acid (c-di-GMP), to transmit signals and
obtain specific cellular responses. Current knowledge about c-di-
GMP signaling has bee ...
[++]
Bacteria have developed an exclusive signal transduction system
involving multiple diguanylate cyclase and phosphodiesterase
domain-containing proteins (GGDEF and EAL/HD-GYP, respectively)
that modulate the levels of the same diffusible molecule,
3 -5 -cyclic diguanylic acid (c-di-GMP), to transmit signals and
obtain specific cellular responses. Current knowledge about c-di-
GMP signaling has been inferred mainly from the analysis of
recombinant bacteria that either lack or overproduce individual
members of the pathway, without addressing potential compensatory
effects or interferences between them. Here, we dissected
c-di-GMP signaling by constructing a Salmonella strain lacking all
GGDEF-domain proteins and then producing derivatives, each
restoring 1 protein. Our analysis showed that most GGDEF proteins
are constitutively expressed and that their expression levels are
not interdependent. Complete deletion of genes encoding GGDEFdomain
proteins abrogated virulence, motility, long-term survival,
and cellulose and fimbriae synthesis. Separate restoration revealed
that 4 proteins from Salmonella and 1 from Yersinia pestis exclusively
restored cellulose synthesis in a c-di-GMP–dependent manner,
indicating that c-di-GMP produced by different GGDEF proteins
can activate the same target. However, the restored strain
containing the STM4551-encoding gene recovered all other phenotypes
by means of gene expression modulation independently
of c-di-GMP. Specifically, fimbriae synthesis and virulence were
recovered through regulation of csgD and the plasmid-encoded
spvAB mRNA levels, respectively. This study provides evidence that
the regulation of the GGDEF-domain proteins network occurs at 2
levels: a level that strictly requires c-di-GMP to control enzymatic
activities directly, restricted to cellulose synthesis in our experimental
conditions, and another that involves gene regulation for
which c-di-GMP synthesis can be dispensable. [--]
Subject
Biofilm formation,
Salmonella virulence,
Signal transduction system cellulose,
STM4551
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Published in
PNAS, May 12, 2009 106 (19) 7997-8002
Departament
Universidad Pública de Navarra/Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa. IdAB. Instituto de Agrobiotecnología / Agrobioteknologiako Institutua
Publisher version
Sponsorship
This research was supported by Grants GEN2003–20234-C06–05 from Acción Estategica de Genómica y Proteómica, CTQ2007-68014-C02-01 from the Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia (Spain), and 2005SGR-693 from Generalitat de Catalunya. B.G. is the recipient of a postdoctoral contract under Grant GEN2003-20234.