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The signaling peptide PapR is required for the activity of the quorum-sensor PlcRa in Bacillus thuringiensis
Author(s) -
Eugénie Huillet,
Ludovic Bridoux,
Isabelle Barboza,
Christelle Lemy,
Gwenaëlle André,
Didier Lereclus
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.352
H-Index - 35
eISSN - 1465-2080
pISSN - 1350-0872
DOI - 10.1099/mic.0.000883
Subject(s) - quorum sensing , peptide , biology , regulator , gene , response regulator , bacillus thuringiensis , signal peptide , transcriptional regulation , complementation , biochemistry , microbiology and biotechnology , gene expression , peptide sequence , virulence , genetics , phenotype , bacteria , mutant
The transcriptional regulator PlcR, its cognate cell-cell signaling heptapeptide PapR 7 , and the oligopeptide permease OppABCDF, required for PapR 7 import, form a quorum-sensing system that controls the expression of virulence factors in Bacillus cereus and Bacillus thuringiensis species. In B. cereus strain ATCC 14579, the transcriptional regulator PlcRa activates the expression of abrB2 gene, which encodes an AbrB-like transcriptional regulator involved in cysteine biosynthesis. PlcRa is a structural homolog of PlcR: in particular, its C-terminal TPR peptide-binding domain could be similarly arranged as in PlcR. The signaling peptide of PlcRa is not known. As PlcRa is a PlcR-like protein, the cognate PapR 7 peptide (ADLPFEF) is a relevant candidate to act as a signaling peptide for PlcRa activation. Also, the putative PapRa 7 peptide (CSIPYEY), encoded by the papRa gene adjacent to the plcRa gene, is a relevant candidate as addition of synthetic PapRa 7 induces a dose-dependent increase of abrB2 expression. To address the issue of peptide selectivity of PlcRa, the role of PapR and PapRa peptides in PlcRa activity was investigated in B. thuringiensis 407 strain, by genetic and functional complementation analyses. A transcriptional fusion between the promoter of abrB2 and lacZ was used to monitor the PlcRa activity in various genetic backgrounds. We demonstrated that PapR was necessary and sufficient for PlcRa activity. We showed that synthetic PapRs from pherogroups II, III and IV and synthetic PapRa 7 were able to trigger abrB2 expression, suggesting that PlcRa is less selective than PlcR. Lastly, the mode of binding of PlcRa was addressed using an in silico approach. Overall, we report a new role for PapR as a signaling peptide for PlcRa activity and show a functional link between PlcR and PlcRa regulons in B. thuringiensis .

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