RitR is an archetype for a novel family of redox sensors in the streptococci that has evolved from two-component response regulators and is required for pneumococcal colonization.
posted on 2018-05-25, 14:07authored byDavid G. Glanville, Lanlan Han, Andrew F. Maule, Alexandra Woodacre, Devsaagar Thanki, Iman Tajer Abdullah, Julie A. Morrissey, Thomas B. Clarke, Hasan Yesilkaya, Nicholas R. Silvaggi, Andrew T. Ulijasz
To survive diverse host environments, the human pathogen Streptococcus pneumoniae must prevent its self-produced, extremely high levels of peroxide from reacting with intracellular iron. However, the regulatory mechanism(s) by which the pneumococcus accomplishes this balance remains largely enigmatic, as this pathogen and other related streptococci lack all known redox-sensing transcription factors. Here we describe a two-component-derived response regulator, RitR, as the archetype for a novel family of redox sensors in a subset of streptococcal species. We show that RitR works to both repress iron transport and enable nasopharyngeal colonization through a mechanism that exploits a single cysteine (Cys128) redox switch located within its linker domain. Biochemical experiments and phylogenetics reveal that RitR has diverged from the canonical two-component virulence regulator CovR to instead dimerize and bind DNA only upon Cys128 oxidation in air-rich environments. Atomic structures show that Cys128 oxidation initiates a "helical unravelling" of the RitR linker region, suggesting a mechanism by which the DNA-binding domain is then released to interact with its cognate regulatory DNA. Expanded computational studies indicate this mechanism could be shared by many microbial species outside the streptococcus genus.
Funding
This work was supported by the Sir Henry Dale Fellow jointly funded by the Wellcome Trust and Royal Society (grant number 107660/Z/15Z) and the Microbiology Society Harry Smith Vacation Studentship (grant number VS16/73).
History
Citation
PLoS Pathogens, 2018, 14 (5), e1007052
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF LIFE SCIENCES/School of Medicine/Department of Infection, Immunity and Inflammation
All data underlying the findings described in this manuscript are freely available to other researchers, either in a public repository, or in the manuscript itself. Atomic structures have been deposited in RCSB protein databank under PBD codes 5U8K, 5VFA and 5U8M.