The transcription regulator BrsR serves as a network hub of natural competence protein–protein interactions inStreptococcus mutans

Author:

Qin HuaORCID,Zou ZhengzhongORCID,Anderson David,Sang Yu,Higashi Dustin,Kreth JensORCID,Merritt JustinORCID

Abstract

Genome evolution is an essential and stringently regulated aspect of biological fitness. For bacteria, natural competence is one of the principal mechanisms of genome evolution and is frequently subject to multiple layers of regulation derived from a plethora of environmental and physiological stimuli. Here, we present a regulatory mechanism that illustrates how such disparate stimuli can be integrated into theStreptococcus mutansnatural competence phenotype.S. mutanspossesses an intriguing, but poorly understood ability to coordinately control its independently regulated natural competence and bacteriocin genetic pathways as a means to acquire DNA released from closely related, bacteriocin-susceptible streptococci. Our results reveal how the bacteriocin-specific transcription activator BrsR directly mediates this coordination by serving as an anti-adaptor protein responsible for antagonizing the proteolysis of the inherently unstable, natural competence-specific alternative sigma factor ComX. This BrsR ability functions entirely independent of its transcription regulator function and directly modulates the timing and severity of the natural competence phenotype. Additionally, many of the DNA uptake proteins produced by the competence system were surprisingly found to possess adaptor abilities, which are employed to terminate the BrsR regulatory circuit via negative feedback. BrsR–competence protein heteromeric complexes directly inhibit nascentbrsRtranscription as well as stimulate the Clp-dependent proteolysis of extant BrsR proteins. This study illustrates how critical genetic regulatory abilities can evolve in a potentially limitless variety of proteins without disrupting their conserved ancestral functions. These unrecognized regulatory abilities are likely fundamental for transducing information through complex genetic networks.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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