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Salt- and Osmo-Responsive Sensor Histidine Kinases Activate the Bradyrhizobium diazoefficiens General Stress Response to Initiate Functional Symbiosis
Author(s) -
Janine Wülser,
Chantal Ernst,
Dominik Vetsch,
Barbara Emmenegger,
Adrien Michel,
Stefanie Lutz,
Christian H. Ahrens,
Julia A. Vorholt,
Raphael Ledermann,
HansMartin Fischer
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
molecular plant-microbe interactions
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1943-7706
pISSN - 0894-0282
DOI - 10.1094/mpmi-02-22-0051-fi
Subject(s) - symbiosis , kinase , histidine , histidine kinase , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , chemistry , biochemistry , genetics , enzyme , bacteria
The general stress response (GSR) enables bacteria to sense and overcome a variety of environmental stresses. In alphaproteobacteria, stress-perceiving histidine kinases of the HWE and HisKA_2 families trigger a signaling cascade that leads to phosphorylation of the response regulator PhyR and consequently to activation of the GSR sigma factor σ EcfG . In the nitrogen-fixing bacterium Bradyrhizobium diazoefficiens, PhyR and σ EcfG are crucial for tolerance against a variety of stresses under free-living conditions and also for efficient infection of its symbiotic host soybean. However, the molecular players involved in stress perception and activation of the GSR remained largely unknown. In this work, we first showed that a mutant variant of PhyR where the conserved phosphorylatable aspartate residue D194 was replaced by alanine (PhyR D194A ) failed to complement the ΔphyR mutant in symbiosis, confirming that PhyR acts as a response regulator. To identify the PhyR-activating kinases in the nitrogen-fixing symbiont, we constructed in-frame deletion mutants lacking single, distinct combinations, or all of the eleven predicted HWE and HisKA_2 kinases, which we named HhkA through HhkK. Phenotypic analysis of the mutants and complemented derivatives identified two functionally redundant kinases, HhkA and HhkE, that are required for nodulation competitiveness and during initiation of symbiosis. Using σ EcfG activity reporter strains, we further showed that both HhkA and HhkE activate the GSR in free-living cells exposed to salt and hyperosmotic stress. In conclusion, our data suggest that HhkA and HhkE trigger GSR activation in response to osmotically stressful conditions which B. diazoefficiens encounters during soybean host infection.

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