Dormancy is a common strategy adopted by bacterial cells as a means of surviving adverse environmental conditions. For Streptomyces bacteria, this involves developing chains of dormant exospores that extend away from the colony surface. Both spore formation and subsequent spore germination are tightly controlled processes, and while significant progress has been made in understanding the underlying regulatory and enzymatic bases for these, there are still significant gaps in our understanding. One class of proteins with a potential role in spore-associated processes are the so-called resuscitation-promoting factors, or Rpfs, which in other actinobacteria are needed to restore active growth to dormant cell populations. The model species Streptomyces coelicolor encodes five Rpf proteins (RpfA to RfpE), and here we show that these proteins have overlapping functions during growth. Collectively, the S. coelicolor Rpfs promote spore germination and are critical for growth under nutrient-limiting conditions. Previous studies have revealed structural similarities between the Rpf domain and lysozyme, and our in vitro biochemical assays revealed various levels of peptidoglycan cleavage capabilities for each of these five Streptomyces enzymes. Peptidoglycan remodeling by enzymes such as these must be stringently governed so as to retain the structural integrity of the cell wall. Our results suggest that one of the Rpfs, RpfB, is subject to a unique mode of enzymatic autoregulation, mediated by a domain of previously unknown function (DUF348) located within the N terminus of the protein; removal of this domain led to significantly enhanced peptidoglycan cleavage. Streptomyces species are Gram-positive bacteria that abound in soil environments. They are renowned for their secondary metabolic capabilities; they produce a multitude of compounds that have found utility in both medicine and agriculture, including a vast array of antibiotics, chemotherapeutics, immunosuppressants, and antiparasitic agents (1). They are also well known for their complex, multicellular developmental cycle (2). The Streptomyces life cycle can be broadly divided into two stages: vegetative growth and reproductive development. Unlike most bacteria, Streptomyces organisms are filamentous, and during the vegetative phase of their life cycle, they grow by hyphal tip extension and branching, ultimately forming an interwoven network of cells known as the vegetative mycelium (3). Under certain as yet poorly defined stress conditions, vegetative growth ceases, and reproductive growth ensues. Here, unbranched filamentous cells, termed aerial hyphae, grow away from the vegetative mycelium and extend into the air. These cells then undergo a synchronous round of chromosome segregation, cell division, and cell wall modification to yield chains of dormant exospores (4). These spores are resistant to a wide variety of environmental insults and can be widely dispersed.A dormant cell state is not unique to the streptomycetes, and indeed many well-studied bacteria (e...
SummaryPeptidoglycan degradative enzymes have important roles at many stages during the bacterial life cycle, and it is critical that these enzymes be stringently regulated to avoid compromising the integrity of the cell wall. How this regulation is exerted is of considerable interest: promoter-based control and proteinprotein interactions are known to be employed; however, other regulatory mechanisms are almost certainly involved. In the actinobacteria, a class of muralytic enzymes -the 'resuscitation-promoting factors' (Rpfs) -orchestrates the resuscitation of dormant cells. In this study, we have taken a holistic approach to exploring the mechanisms governing RpfA function using the model bacterium Streptomyces coelicolor and have uncovered unprecedented multilevel regulation that is coordinated by three second messengers. Our studies show that RpfA is subject to transcriptional control by the cyclic AMP receptor protein, riboswitch-mediated transcription attenuation in response to cyclic di-AMP, and growth stage-dependent proteolysis in response to ppGpp accumulation. Furthermore, our results suggest that these control mechanisms are likely applicable to cell wall lytic enzymes in other bacteria.
Streptomyces scabies causes common scab, an economical disease affecting potato crops world-wide, for which no effective control measure exists. This pathogen produces the plant toxin thaxtomin A, which is involved in symptom development on potato tubers. A biological control approach that can limit S. scabies growth and repress thaxtomin production represents an attractive alternative to classical control strategies. Pseudomonas sp. LBUM 223 produces phenazine-1-carboxylic acid (PCA), an antibiotic that inhibits the growth of plant pathogens and contributes to the biological control of plant diseases. In this study, the involvement of LBUM 223's PCA-producing ability in the growth inhibition of S. scabies, repression of thaxtomin biosynthesis genes (txtA and txtC) and the biological control of common scab of potato was investigated using a mutant defective in PCA production (LBUM 223phzC(-) ). Streptomyces scabies growth was inhibited to a significantly lesser degree by LBUM 223phzC(-) than by the wild type. LBUM 223 also significantly repressed txtA and txtC expression in S. scabies and protected potato against disease, whereas LBUM 223phzC(-) did not. These results suggest that PCA production is central to the ability of LBUM 223 to limit pathogen growth, repress the expression of key pathogenicity genes and control common scab of potato.
Non-coding regulatory RNAs fine-tune gene expression post-transcriptionally. In the streptomycetes, rpfA - encoding a muralytic enzyme required for establishing and exiting dormancy - is flanked by non-coding regulatory RNA elements both upstream (riboswitch) and downstream [antisense small RNA (sRNA)]. In Streptomyces coelicolor, the upstream riboswitch decreases rpfA transcript abundance in response to the second messenger cyclic di-AMP, itself involved in cell wall metabolism and dormancy. There is, however, no obvious expression platform associated with this riboswitch and consequently, its mechanism of action is entirely unknown. Using in vitro transcription assays, we discovered that the rpfA riboswitch promoted premature transcription termination in response to cyclic di-AMP. Through an extensive mutational analysis, we determined that attenuation required ligand binding and involved an unusual extended stem-loop region unique to a subset of rpfA riboswitches in the actinobacteria. At the other end of the rpfA gene, an antisense sRNA, termed Scr3097, is expressed opposite the predicted rpfA terminator. Using northern blotting, we found that Scr3097 accumulation mirrored that of the rpfA mRNA. In liquid culture, we detected Scr3097 exclusively in exponential-phase cells, and in plate-grown culture, we observed the sRNA primarily in differentiating cultures. Using mutational analyses, we found that the sRNA increased rpfA mRNA abundance in cells. Taken together, our work revealed multiple regulatory RNAs controlling rpfA expression in the streptomycetes.
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