Author:
Kellenberger Colleen A.,Wilson Stephen C.,Hickey Scott F.,Gonzalez Tania L.,Su Yichi,Hallberg Zachary F.,Brewer Thomas F.,Iavarone Anthony T.,Carlson Hans K.,Hsieh Yu-Fang,Hammond Ming C.
Abstract
Cyclic dinucleotides are an expanding class of signaling molecules that control many aspects of bacterial physiology. A synthase for cyclic AMP-GMP (cAG, also referenced as 3′-5′, 3′-5′ cGAMP) called DncV is associated with hyperinfectivity of Vibrio cholerae but has not been found in many bacteria, raising questions about the prevalence and function of cAG signaling. We have discovered that the environmental bacterium Geobacter sulfurreducens produces cAG and uses a subset of GEMM-I class riboswitches (GEMM-Ib, Genes for the Environment, Membranes, and Motility) as specific receptors for cAG. GEMM-Ib riboswitches regulate genes associated with extracellular electron transfer; thus cAG signaling may control aspects of bacterial electrophysiology. These findings expand the role of cAG beyond organisms that harbor DncV and beyond pathogenesis to microbial geochemistry, which is important to environmental remediation and microbial fuel cell development. Finally, we have developed an RNA-based fluorescent biosensor for live-cell imaging of cAG. This selective, genetically encodable biosensor will be useful to probe the biochemistry and cell biology of cAG signaling in diverse bacteria.
Funder
HHS | NIH | NIH Office of the Director
U.S. Department of Defense
HHS | NIH | National Institute of General Medical Sciences
NSF | Directorate for Mathematical and Physical Sciences
Burroughs Wellcome Fund
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
118 articles.
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