Affiliation:
1. Micalis Institute, INRA, AgroParisTech, Université Paris-Saclay, Jouy-en-Josas, France
2. Micalis Institute, INRA, AgroParisTech, CNRS, Université Paris-Saclay, Jouy-en-Josas, France
Abstract
ABSTRACT
At the heart of central carbon metabolism, pyruvate is a pivotal metabolite in all living cells.
Bacillus subtilis
is able to excrete pyruvate as well as to use it as the sole carbon source. We herein reveal that
ysbAB
(renamed
pftAB
), the only operon specifically induced in pyruvate-grown
B. subtilis
cells, encodes a hetero-oligomeric membrane complex which operates as a facilitated transport system specific for pyruvate, thereby defining a novel class of transporter. We demonstrate that the LytST two-component system is responsible for the induction of
pftAB
in the presence of pyruvate by binding of the LytT response regulator to a palindromic region upstream of
pftAB
. We show that both glucose and malate, the preferred carbon sources for
B. subtilis
, trigger the binding of CcpA upstream of
pftAB
, which results in its catabolite repression. However, an additional CcpA-independent mechanism represses
pftAB
in the presence of malate. Screening a genome-wide transposon mutant library, we find that an active malic enzyme replenishing the pyruvate pool is required for this repression. We next reveal that the higher the influx of pyruvate, the stronger the CcpA-independent repression of
pftAB
, which suggests that intracellular pyruvate retroinhibits
pftAB
induction via LytST. Such a retroinhibition challenges the rational design of novel nature-inspired sensors and synthetic switches but undoubtedly offers new possibilities for the development of integrated sensor/controller circuitry. Overall, we provide evidence for a complete system of sensors, feed-forward and feedback controllers that play a major role in environmental growth of
B. subtilis
.
IMPORTANCE
Pyruvate is a small-molecule metabolite ubiquitous in living cells. Several species also use it as a carbon source as well as excrete it into the environment. The bacterial systems for pyruvate import/export have yet to be discovered. Here, we identified in the model bacterium
Bacillus subtilis
the first import/export system specific for pyruvate, PftAB, which defines a novel class of transporter. In this bacterium, extracellular pyruvate acts as the signal molecule for the LytST two-component system (TCS), which in turn induces expression of PftAB. However, when the pyruvate influx is high, LytST activity is drastically retroinhibited. Such a retroinhibition challenges the rational design of novel nature-inspired sensors and synthetic switches but undoubtedly offers new possibilities for the development of integrated sensor/controller circuitry.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology