Connection between protein-tyrosine kinase inhibition and coping with oxidative stress in Bacillus subtilis

Author:

Shi Lei1ORCID,Derouiche Abderahmane12ORCID,Pandit Santosh1ORCID,Alazmi Meshari234,Ventroux Magali5,Køhler Julie Bonne6,Noirot-Gros Marie-Francoise5,Gao Xin24,Mijakovic Ivan16

Affiliation:

1. Systems and Synthetic Biology Division, Department of Biology and Biological Engineering, Chalmers University of Technology, Gothenburg SE-412 96, Sweden

2. Computational Bioscience Research Center Computer, Electrical and Mathematical Sciences and Engineering Division, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, Thuwal 23955-6900, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

3. Department of Artificial Intelligence, College of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Ha'il, HailHa’il 81411, Saudi Arabia

4. Computer Science Program Computer, Electrical and Mathematical Sciences and Engineering Division, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, Thuwal 23955-6900, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

5. Micalis Institute, INRAE, AgroParisTech, Université Paris-Saclay, Jouy-en-Josas 78352, France

6. Technical University of Denmark (DTU) Biosustain, The Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Biosustainability, Technical University of Denmark, Lyngby DK-2800, Denmark

Abstract

In bacteria, attenuation of protein-tyrosine phosphorylation occurs during oxidative stress. The main described mechanism behind this effect is the H 2 O 2 -triggered conversion of bacterial phospho-tyrosines to protein-bound 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine. This disrupts the bacterial tyrosine phosphorylation-based signaling network, which alters the bacterial polysaccharide biosynthesis. Herein, we report an alternative mechanism, in which oxidative stress leads to a direct inhibition of bacterial protein-tyrosine kinases (BY-kinases). We show that DefA, a minor peptide deformylase, inhibits the activity of BY-kinase PtkA when Bacillus subtilis is exposed to oxidative stress. High levels of PtkA activity are known to destabilize B. subtilis pellicle formation, which leads to higher sensitivity to oxidative stress. Interaction with DefA inhibits both PtkA autophosphorylation and phosphorylation of its substrate Ugd, which is involved in exopolysaccharide formation. Inactivation of defA drastically reduces the capacity of B. subtilis to cope with oxidative stress, but it does not affect the major oxidative stress regulons PerR, OhrR, and Spx, indicating that PtkA inhibition is the main pathway for DefA involvement in this stress response. Structural analysis identified DefA residues Asn95, Tyr150, and Glu152 as essential for interaction with PtkA. Inhibition of PtkA depends also on the presence of a C-terminal α-helix of DefA, which resembles PtkA-interacting motifs from known PtkA activators, TkmA, SalA, and MinD. Loss of either the key interacting residues or the inhibitory helix of DefA abolishes inhibition of PtkA in vitro and impairs postoxidative stress recovery in vivo, confirming the involvement of these structural features in the proposed mechanism.

Funder

The Swedish Research Council Vetenskapsrådet

The Novo Nordisk Foundation

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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