Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The production of cellulose fibrils is involved in the attachment of
Agrobacterium tumefaciens
to its plant host. Consistent with previous studies, we reported recently that a putative diguanylate cyclase,
celR
, is required for synthesis of this polymer in
A. tumefaciens
. In this study, the effects of
celR
and other components of the regulatory pathway of cellulose production were explored. Mutational analysis of
celR
demonstrated that the cyclase requires the catalytic GGEEF motif, as well as the conserved aspartate residue of a CheY-like receiver domain, for stimulating cellulose production. Moreover, a site-directed mutation within the PilZ domain of CelA, the catalytic subunit of the cellulose synthase complex, greatly reduced cellulose production. In addition, deletion of
divK
, the first gene of the
divK-celR
operon, also reduced cellulose production. This requirement for
divK
was alleviated by expression of a constitutively active form of CelR, suggesting that DivK acts upstream of CelR activation. Based on bacterial two-hybrid assays, CelR homodimerizes but does not interact with DivK. The mutation in
divK
additionally affected cell morphology, and this effect was complementable by a wild-type copy of the gene, but not by the constitutively active allele of
celR
. These results support the hypothesis that CelR is a bona fide c-di-GMP synthase and that the nucleotide signal produced by this enzyme activates CelA via the PilZ domain. Our studies also suggest that the DivK/CelR signaling pathway in
Agrobacterium
regulates cellulose production independent of cell cycle checkpoint systems that are controlled by
divK
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
16 articles.
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