Affiliation:
1. The Scripps Research Institute, Department of Molecular and Experimental Medicine, Division of Cellular Biology, 10550 North Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla, California 92037
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The initiation of sporulation in
Bacillus
species is controlled by the phosphorelay signal transduction system. Multiple regulatory elements act on the phosphorelay to modulate the level of protein phosphorylation in response to cellular, environmental, and metabolic signals. In
Bacillus anthracis
nine possible histidine sensor kinases can positively activate the system, while two response regulator aspartyl phosphate phosphatases of the Rap family negatively impact the pathway by dephosphorylating the Spo0F intermediate response regulator. In this study, we have characterized the
B. anthracis
members of the Spo0E family of phosphatases that specifically dephosphorylate the Spo0A response regulator of the phosphorelay and master regulator of sporulation. The products of four genes were able to promote the dephosphorylation of Spo0A∼P in vitro. The overexpression of two of these
B. anthracis
Spo0E-like proteins from a multicopy vector consistently resulted in a sporulation-deficient phenotype. A third gene was found to be not transcribed in vivo. A fourth gene encoded a prematurely truncated protein due to a base pair deletion that nevertheless was subject to translational frameshift repair in an
Escherichia coli
protein expression system. A fifth Spo0E-like protein has been structurally and functionally characterized as a phosphatase of Spo0A∼P by R. N. Grenha et al. (J. Biol. Chem.
281:
37993-38003, 2006). We propose that these proteins may contribute to maintain
B. anthracis
in the transition phase of growth during an active infection and therefore contribute to the virulence of this organism.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
31 articles.
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