Structure and mechanism of a Hypr GGDEF enzyme that activates cGAMP signaling to control extracellular metal respiration

Autor: Todd A. Wright, Zachary F. Hallberg, Daniel R. Bond, Chi Ho Chan, Kevin W. Doxzen, Ming C. Hammond, Philip J. Kranzusch, James J Park
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2019
Předmět:
0301 basic medicine
Cyclic di-GMP
Riboswitch
Protein Conformation
Hypr GGDEF
Crystallography
X-Ray

cyclic dinucleotide
chemistry.chemical_compound
Biology (General)
Geobacter sulfurreducens
Microbiology and Infectious Disease
biology
Chemistry
General Neuroscience
General Medicine
6. Clean water
Cell biology
Metals
Medicine
Nucleotides
Cyclic

Signal transduction
Oxidation-Reduction
cyclic di-GMP
Signal Transduction
Research Article
QH301-705.5
riboswitch
Science
030106 microbiology
Chemical biology
General Biochemistry
Genetics and Molecular Biology

03 medical and health sciences
Bacterial Proteins
Biochemistry and Chemical Biology
Gene knockout
General Immunology and Microbiology
E. coli
Gene Expression Regulation
Bacterial

Models
Theoretical

GGDEF domain
biology.organism_classification
Kinetics
cGAMP signaling
030104 developmental biology
Other
Geobacter
Zdroj: eLife, Vol 8 (2019)
eLife
Popis: A newfound signaling pathway employs a GGDEF enzyme with unique activity compared to the majority of homologs associated with bacterial cyclic di-GMP signaling. This system provides a rare opportunity to study how signaling proteins natively gain distinct function. Using genetic knockouts, riboswitch reporters, and RNA-Seq, we show that GacA, the Hypr GGDEF in Geobacter sulfurreducens, specifically regulates cyclic GMP-AMP (3′,3′-cGAMP) levels in vivo to stimulate gene expression associated with metal reduction separate from electricity production. To reconcile these in vivo findings with prior in vitro results that showed GacA was promiscuous, we developed a full kinetic model combining experimental data and mathematical modeling to reveal mechanisms that contribute to in vivo specificity. A 1.4 Å-resolution crystal structure of the Geobacter Hypr GGDEF domain was determined to understand the molecular basis for those mechanisms, including key cross-dimer interactions. Together these results demonstrate that specific signaling can result from a promiscuous enzyme.
eLife digest Microscopic organisms known as bacteria are found in virtually every environment on the planet. One reason bacteria are so successful is that they are able to form communities known as biofilms on surfaces in animals and other living things, as well as on rocks and other features in the environment. These biofilms protect the bacteria from fluctuations in the environment and toxins. For over 30 years, a class of enzymes called the GGDEF enzymes were thought to make a single signal known as cyclic di-GMP that regulates the formation of biofilms. However, in 2016, a team of researchers reported that some GGDEF enzymes, including one from a bacterium called Geobacter sulfurreducens, were also able to produce two other signals known as cGAMP and cyclic di-AMP. The experiments involved making the enzymes and testing their activity outside the cell. Therefore, it remained unclear whether these enzymes (dubbed ‘Hypr’ GGDEF enzymes) actually produce all three signals inside cells and play a role in forming bacterial biofilms. G. sulfurreducens is unusual because it is able to grow on metallic minerals or electrodes to generate electrical energy. As part of a community of microorganisms, they help break down pollutants in contaminated areas and can generate electricity from wastewater. Now, Hallberg, Chan et al. – including many of the researchers involved in the 2016 work – combined several experimental and mathematical approaches to study the Hypr GGDEF enzymes in G. sulfurreducens. The experiments show that the Hypr GGDEF enzymes produced cGAMP, but not the other two signals, inside the cells. This cGAMP regulated the ability of G. sulfurreducens to grow by extracting electrical energy from the metallic minerals, which appears to be a new, biofilm-less lifestyle. Further experiments revealed how Hypr GGDEF enzymes have evolved to preferentially make cGAMP over the other two signals. Together, these findings demonstrate that enzymes with the ability to make several different signals, are capable of generating specific responses in bacterial cells. By understanding how bacteria make decisions, it may be possible to change their behaviors. The findings of Hallberg, Chan et al. help to identify the signaling pathways involved in this decision-making and provide new tools to study them in the future.
Databáze: OpenAIRE