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Protein kinase B controls Mycobacterium tuberculosis growth via phosphorylation of the transcriptional regulator Lsr2 at threonine 112.

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posted on 2019-10-02, 12:56 authored by K Alqaseer, O Turapov, P Barthe, H Jagatia, A De Visch, C Roumestand, M Wegrzyn, IL Bartek, MI Voskuil, HM O'Hare, P Ajuh, AR Bottrill, AA Witney, M Cohen-Gonsaud, SJ Waddell, GV Mukamolova
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) is able to persist in the body through months of multi-drug therapy. Mycobacteria possess a wide range of regulatory proteins, including the protein kinase B (PknB) which controls peptidoglycan biosynthesis during growth. Here, we observed that depletion of PknB resulted in specific transcriptional changes, that are likely caused by reduced phosphorylation of the H-NS-like regulator Lsr2 at threonine 112. The activity of PknB towards this phosphosite was confirmed with purified proteins, and this site was required for adaptation of Mtb to hypoxic conditions, and growth on solid media. Like H-NS, Lsr2 binds DNA in sequence-dependent and non-specific modes. PknB phosphorylation of Lsr2 reduced DNA binding, measured by fluorescence anisotropy and electrophoretic mobility shift assays, and our NMR structure of phosphomimetic T112D Lsr2 suggests that this may be due to increased dynamics of the DNA binding domain. Conversely, the phosphoablative T112A Lsr2 had increased binding to certain DNA sites in ChIP-sequencing, and Mtb containing this variant showed transcriptional changes that correspond with the change in DNA binding. In summary, PknB controls Mtb growth and adaptations to the changing host environment by phosphorylating the global transcriptional regulator Lsr2.

Funding

The following reagent was obtained through the NIH Biodefense and Emerging Infections Research Resources Repository, NIAID, NIH: Monoclonal Anti-Mycobacterium tuberculosis GroEL2 (Gene Rv0440), Clone IT70 (DCA4) (produced in vitro), NR-13657; Genomic DNA from Mtb, Strain H37Rv, NR-48669. We acknowledge the Centre for Core Biotechnology Services at the University of Leicester for support with containment level 3 experiments and analysis of mycobacterial proteins.

History

Citation

Molecular Microbiology, 2019

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF LIFE SCIENCES/School of Medicine/Department of Infection, Immunity and Inflammation

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Molecular Microbiology

Publisher

Wiley

eissn

1365-2958

Copyright date

2019

Available date

2019-10-02

Publisher version

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/mmi.14398

Notes

Database: Mycobrowser release 3 2018-06-05, 8 https://mycobrowser.epfl.ch (Kapopoulou et al., 2011). The accession numbers for the mass-spectrometry proteomics data reported in this paper are ProteomeXchange Consortium via the PRIDE partner repository PXD009239 and 10.6019/PXD009239 (http://www.proteomexchange.org). The accession numbers for microarray data – ArrayExpress, E-MTAB-7627, https://www.ebi.ac.uk/arrayexpress; ChIP-Seq datasets - the European Nucleotide Archive (ENA), PRJEB31102, http://www.ebi.ac.uk/ena/data/view/PRJEB3110; for Lsr2 protein structures - the Protein Data Bank https://www.wwpdb.org, PDB6QKP and PDB 6QKQ; the chemical shifts - the BMRB, BMRB ID 34358 and BMRB ID 34358.

Language

en

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