Litcius/Paper detail

Feedback Control of a Two-Component Signaling System by an Fe-S-Binding Receiver Domain

B. Stein, Aretha Fiebig, Sean Crosson

2020mBio21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Two-component signal transduction systems (TCSs) are broadly conserved in the bacterial kingdom and generally contain two molecular components, a sensor histidine kinase and a receiver protein. Sensor histidine kinases alter their phosphorylation state in direct response to a physical or chemical cue, whereas receiver proteins “receive” the phosphoryl group from the kinase to regulate a change in cell physiology. We have discovered that a single-domain receiver protein, FixT, binds an Fe-S cluster and controls Caulobacter heme homeostasis though its function as a negative-feedback regulator of the oxygen sensor kinase FixL. We provide evidence that the Fe-S cluster protects FixT from Lon-dependent proteolysis in the cell and endows FixT with the ability to function as a second, autonomous oxygen/redox sensor in the FixL-FixJ signaling pathway. This study introduces a novel mechanism of regulated TCS feedback control by an Fe-S-binding receiver domain.

Topics & Concepts

Caulobacter crescentusHistidine kinaseResponse regulatorAutophosphorylationCell biologyTwo-component regulatory systemTranscription factorPhosphorylationTranscription (linguistics)Signal transductionBiologyBiochemistryChemistryCell cycleProtein kinase AGeneMutantLinguisticsPhilosophyBacterial Genetics and BiotechnologyBacterial biofilms and quorum sensingVibrio bacteria research studies