Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular Microbiology, John Innes Centre, Norwich, United Kingdom
2. Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, John Innes Centre, Norwich, United Kingdom
Abstract
ABSTRACT
WhiB is the founding member of a family of proteins (the
W
hi
B
-
l
ike [Wbl] family) that carry a [4Fe-4S] iron-sulfur cluster and play key roles in diverse aspects of the biology of actinomycetes, including pathogenesis, antibiotic resistance, and the control of development. In
Streptomyces
, WhiB is essential for the process of developmentally controlled cell division that leads to sporulation. The biochemical function of Wbl proteins has been controversial; here, we set out to determine unambiguously if WhiB functions as a transcription factor using chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing (ChIP-seq) in
Streptomyces venezuelae
. In the first demonstration of
in vivo
genome-wide Wbl binding, we showed that WhiB regulates the expression of key genes required for sporulation by binding upstream of ~240 transcription units. Strikingly, the WhiB regulon is identical to the previously characterized WhiA regulon, providing an explanation for the identical phenotypes of
whiA
and
whiB
mutants. Using ChIP-seq, we demonstrated that
in vivo
DNA binding by WhiA depends on WhiB and vice versa, showing that WhiA and WhiB function cooperatively to control expression of a common set of WhiAB target genes. Finally, we show that mutation of the cysteine residues that coordinate the [4Fe-4S] cluster in WhiB prevents DNA binding by both WhiB and WhiA
in vivo
.
IMPORTANCE
Despite the central importance of
W
hi
B
-
l
ike (Wbl) proteins in actinomycete biology, a conclusive demonstration of their biochemical function has been elusive, and they have been difficult to study, particularly
in vitro
, largely because they carry an oxygen-sensitive [4Fe-4S] cluster. Here we used genome-wide ChIP-seq to investigate the function of
Streptomyces
WhiB, the founding member of the Wbl family. The advantage of this approach is that the oxygen sensitivity of the [4Fe-4S] cluster becomes irrelevant once the protein has been cross-linked to DNA
in vivo
. Our data provide the most compelling
in vivo
evidence to date that WhiB, and, by extension, probably all Wbl proteins, function as transcription factors. Further, we show that WhiB does not act independently but rather coregulates its regulon of sporulation genes with a partner transcription factor, WhiA.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
78 articles.
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