Affiliation:
1. Division of Bacterial, Parasitic, and Allergenic Products, Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, FDA, Silver Spring, Maryland, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The two-component response regulator RisA, encoded by open reading frame BP3554 in the
Bordetella pertussis
Tohama I genomic sequence, is a known activator of
vrg
genes, a set of genes whose expression is increased under the same environmental conditions (known as modulation) that result in repression of the
bvgAS
virulence regulon. Here we demonstrate that RisA is phosphorylated
in vivo
and that RisA phosphorylation is required for activation of
vrg
genes. An adjacent histidine kinase gene,
risS
, is truncated by frameshift mutation in
B. pertussis
but not in
Bordetella bronchiseptica
or
Bordetella parapertussis
. Neither deletion of
risS
′ or
bvgAS
nor phenotypic modulation with MgSO
4
affected levels of phosphorylated RisA (RisA∼P) in
B. pertussis
. However, RisA phosphorylation did require the histidine kinase encoded by BP3223, here named RisK (cognate histidine kinase of RisA). RisK was also required for expression of the
vrg
genes. This requirement could be obviated by the introduction of the phosphorylation-mimicking RisA
D60E
mutant, indicating that an active conformation of RisA, but not phosphorylation
per se
, is crucial for
vrg
activation. Interestingly, expression of
vrg
genes is still modulated by MgSO
4
in cells harboring the RisA
D60E
mutation, suggesting that the activated RisA senses additional signals to control
vrg
expression in response to environmental stimuli.
IMPORTANCE
In
B. pertussis
, the BvgAS two-component system activates the expression of virulence genes by binding of BvgA∼P to their promoters. Expression of the reciprocally regulated
vrg
genes requires RisA and is also repressed by the Bvg-activated BvgR. RisA is an OmpR-like response regulator, but RisA phosphorylation was not expected because the gene for its presumed, cooperonic, histidine kinase is inactivated by mutation. In this study, we demonstrate phosphorylation of RisA
in vivo
by a noncooperonic histidine kinase. We also show that RisA phosphorylation is necessary but not sufficient for
vrg
activation but, importantly, is not affected by BvgAS status. Instead, we propose that
vrg
expression is controlled by BvgAS through its regulation of BvgR, a cyclic di-GMP (c-di-GMP) phosphodiesterase.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology