Chemotaxis in Pectobacterium atrosepticum Scri1043: functional and structural studies on chemotaxis adaptation proteins and chemoreceptors
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Velando Soriano, FélixEditorial
Universidad de Granada
Departamento
Universidad de Granada. Programa de Doctorado en Biología Fundamental y de SistemasDate
2023Fecha lectura
2023-09-29Referencia bibliográfica
Velando Soriano, Félix. Chemotaxis in Pectobacterium atrosepticum Scri1043: functional and structural studies on chemotaxis adaptation proteins and chemoreceptors. Granada: Universidad de Granada, 2023. [https://hdl.handle.net/10481/85094]
Patrocinador
Tesis Univ. Granada.Résumé
Bacteria possess different systems to sense and respond to environmental signals. Onecomponent
systems, two-component systems and chemosensory pathways are the most
commonly found. While one- and two-component systems mainly control gene expression and
are present in all bacteria we currently know, chemosensory pathways are approximately found
in half of the bacterial genomes described to date and primarily mediate chemotaxis.
The core of a chemosensory pathway is the ternary complex formed by chemoreceptors, the
CheA autokinase and the CheW coupling proteins. Chemoreceptors sense ligands and modulate
CheA activity, leading to transphosphorylation of the response regulator CheY. CheY-P interacts
with the flagellar motor, and this results in chemotaxis, or movement towards or away of
compounds. In this process, adaptation proteins are important to enable bacteria to react
appropriately to physicochemical gradients. These adaptation proteins, CheR and CheB, are
tasked with methylation and demethylation of chemoreceptors, respectively; a mechanism that
causes changes in their sensitivity to their cognate ligands.
A canonical chemoreceptor typically consists of: (i) a periplasmic ligand binding domain; (ii) a
transmembrane module; and (iii) a cytoplasmic signaling domain. Chemoreceptor genes are
easy to predict bioinformatically, but the function and signals recognized for most of them
remain unknown. Plant-associated bacteria have a higher number of chemoreceptors than
bacteria inhabiting other niches, and exploring the function of these receptors can help to
understand the evolutionary pressures that have driven chemoreceptor evolution in this
particular ecological niche.
In this thesis, the enterobacterium Pectobacterium atrosepticum, a phytopathogen of global
relevance, was used as a model to explore chemotaxis. Strain SCRI1043 has a single
chemosensory pathway and 36 chemoreceptors. Interestingly, 19 of them present carboxyterminal
pentapeptides, which, in Escherichia coli and other species, were found to function as
docking sites for the adaptation enzymes, CheB and CheR.
I demonstrated that the chemosensory pathway of P. atrosepticum SCRI1043 regulates
chemotaxis and characterised the interaction between CheR/CheB and the chemoreceptors and
identified the function of four chemoreceptors that were termed PacA, PacB, PacC and PacP. I
found that CheR of SCRI1043 (CheR_Pec) binds, with different affinities, all 9 different C-terminal
pentapeptides present in the chemoreceptors of this strain. In addition, I showed that the
cellular concentration of CheR_Pec is subject to changes during growth and is in the range of the
Kd values for the interaction of CheR with the different pentapeptides, suggesting a new
mechanism of regulation of the chemotactic output. Contrary to these results, CheB of SCRI1943
(CheB_Pec) is unable to bind pentapeptides, and solving the three-dimensional structure of
CheB_Pec by X-ray crystallography revealed that the region corresponding to the pentapeptide
binding site in the E. coli CheB is disordered in CheB_Pec, which most likely accouts for the lack
of pentapeptide binding. These results supported that CheB methylesterases can be divided into
pentapeptide dependent and independent enzymes.
PacA was functionally described as a chemoreceptor with a dCache ligand binding domain that
binds and mediates chemotaxis towards quaternary amines (e.g. choline, betaine, L-carnitine)
and the amino acid L-proline. During this thesis, the three-dimensional structure of the sensor domain of PacA was solved. Through comparison with that of the sensor domain of the PctD
chemoreceptor of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a receptor that has a similar profile of ligands, but
which also recognizes the neurotransmitter acetylcholine, progress was made towards
understanding quaternary amines binding by dCache domains.
Along with PacA, I described two additional chemoreceptors of SCRI1043 that recognize amino
acids, indicating that amino acids are important signals for bacteria. PacB has a dCache ligand
binding domain that recognizes a wide range of proteinogenic and non-proteinogenic amino
acids. Instead, PacC, the sole chemoreceptor encoded in the chemotaxis gene cluster, was
shown to be homologous to the Tsr chemoreceptor of E. coli, but was shown to bind and mediate
taxis to D- and L- aspartate and L-asparagine. Its evolutionary history was described in this thesis.
Finally, PacP, the only chemoreceptor with a sCache domain in SCRI1043, was described as the
first identified chemoreceptor for phosphorylated compounds. PacP binds compounds related
to the glycolysis as well as glycerol 3-phosphate and glycerol 2-phosphate. It is shown here that
it is part of a family of chemoreceptors that primarily recognize glycerol 3-phosphate - a
potential stress signal in plants. Evolutionary analyses revealed that this subfamily of
chemoreceptors originated from sCache domains that recognize organic acids. It was concluded
that the recognition of families of homologous proteins with similar ligand binding capabilities
from in silico docking analyses is a promising tool to rapidly increase knowledge about sensing
capabilities of all kinds of bacterial receptors.
Overall, the findings in this thesis have led to significant advances in the knowledge of the
chemotactic capacities of the important phytopathogen P. atrosepticum, including the function
of several chemoreceptors and how the adaptation enzymes CheR and CheB recognize
chemoreceptors. The role of chemotaxis in plant colonization and disease development by P.
atrosepticum is now open for scientific experimentation, and insights gleaned on this thesis can
be applied to other soft rot Pectobacteriaceae species. Collectively, soft rot Pectobacteriaceae
phytopathogens have a great impact on a wide range of crops and plants worldwide. Future
work will allow the characterization of new chemoreceptor proteins of P. atrosepticum, as well
as describe their homologue families in other species, thereby facilitating progress in the study
of bacterial sensing and signaling mechanisms.