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NosP Signaling Modulates the NO/H-NOX-Mediated Multicomponent c-Di-GMP Network and Biofilm Formation in Shewanella oneidensis
Author(s) -
LisaMarie Nisbett,
Lucas Binnenkade,
Bezalel Bacon,
Sajjad Hossain,
Nicholas J. Kotloski,
Evan D. Brutinel,
Raimo Hartmann,
Knut Drescher,
Dhruv P. Arora,
Sandhya Muralidharan,
Kai M. Thormann,
Jeffrey A. Gralnick,
Elizabeth M. Boon
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.43
H-Index - 253
eISSN - 1520-4995
pISSN - 0006-2960
DOI - 10.1021/acs.biochem.9b00706
Subject(s) - shewanella oneidensis , biofilm , autophosphorylation , chemistry , microbiology and biotechnology , bacteria , nox , signal transduction , biochemistry , cell signaling , biology , kinase , protein kinase a , genetics , organic chemistry , combustion
Biofilms form when bacteria aggregate in a self-secreted exopolysaccharide matrix; they are resistant to antibiotics and implicated in disease. Nitric oxide (NO) is known to mediate biofilm formation in many bacteria via ligation to H-NOX (heme-NO/oxygen binding) domains. Most NO-responsive bacteria, however, lack H-NOX domain-containing proteins. We have identified another NO-sensing protein (NosP), which is predicted to be involved in two-component signaling and biofilm regulation in many species. Here, we demonstrate that NosP participates in the previously described H-NOX/NO-responsive multicomponent c-di-GMP signaling network in Shewanella oneidensis . Strains lacking either nosP or its co-cistronic kinase nahK (previously hnoS ) produce immature biofilms, while hnoX and hnoK (kinase responsive to NO/H-NOX) mutants result in wild-type biofilm architecture. We demonstrate that NosP regulates the autophosphorylation activity of NahK as well as HnoK. HnoK and NahK have been shown to regulate three response regulators (HnoB, HnoC, and HnoD) that together comprise a NO-responsive multicomponent c-di-GMP signaling network. Here, we propose that NosP/NahK adds regulation on top of H-NOX/HnoK to modulate this c-di-GMP signaling network, and ultimately biofilm formation, by governing the flux of phosphate through both HnoK and NahK. In addition, it appears that NosP and H-NOX act to counter each other in a push-pull mechanism; NosP/NahK promotes biofilm formation through inhibition of H-NOX/HnoK signaling, which itself reduces the extent of biofilm formation. Addition of NO results in a reduction of c-di-GMP and biofilm formation, primarily through disinhibition of HnoK activity.

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