The phage shock protein (PSP) envelope stress response: discovery of novel partners and evolutionary history

Author:

Ravi Janani12ORCID,Anantharaman Vivek3ORCID,Chen Samuel Zorn4,Brenner Evan Pierce1ORCID,Datta Pratik2,Aravind L.3ORCID,Gennaro Maria Laura2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Informatics, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, Colorado, USA

2. Public Health Research Institute, Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, Newark, New Jersey, USA

3. National Center for Biotechnology Information, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA

4. Computer Science Engineering Undergraduate Program, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Bacterial phage shock protein (PSP) systems stabilize the bacterial cell membrane and protect against envelope stress. These systems have been associated with virulence, but despite their critical roles, PSP components are not well characterized outside proteobacteria. Using comparative genomics and protein sequence-structure-function analyses, we systematically identified and analyzed PSP homologs, phyletic patterns, domain architectures, and gene neighborhoods. This approach underscored the evolutionary significance of the system, revealing that its core protein PspA (Snf7 in ESCRT outside bacteria) was present in the last universal common ancestor and that this ancestral functionality has since diversified into multiple novel, distinct PSP systems across life. Several novel partners of the PSP system were identified: (i) the Toastrack domain, likely facilitating assembly of sub-membrane stress-sensing and signaling complexes, (ii) the newly defined HTH-associated α-helical signaling domain-PadR-like transcriptional regulator pair system, and (iii) multiple independent associations with ATPase, CesT/Tir-like chaperone, and Band-7 domains in proteins thought to mediate sub-membrane dynamics. Our work also uncovered links between the PSP components and other domains, such as novel variants of SHOCT-like domains, suggesting roles in assembling membrane-associated complexes of proteins with disparate biochemical functions. Results are available at our interactive web app, https://jravilab.org/psp . IMPORTANCE Phage shock proteins (PSP) are virulence-associated, cell membrane stress-protective systems. They have mostly been characterized in Proteobacteria and Firmicutes. We now show that a minimal PSP system was present in the last universal common ancestor that evolved and diversified into newly identified functional contexts. Recognizing the conservation and evolution of PSP systems across bacterial phyla contributes to our understanding of stress response mechanisms in prokaryotes. Moreover, the newly discovered PSP modularity will likely prompt new studies of lineage-specific cell envelope structures, lifestyles, and adaptation mechanisms. Finally, our results validate the use of domain architecture and genetic context for discovery in comparative genomics.

Funder

University of Colorado Anschutz

Michigan State University

HHS | National Institutes of Health

Oak Ridge Associated Universities

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

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