Leveraging the histidine kinase-phosphatase duality to sculpt two-component signaling

Abstract
Bacteria must constantly probe their environment for rapid adaptation, a crucial need most frequently served by two-component systems (TCS). As one component, sensor histidine kinases (SHK) control the phosphorylation of the second component, the response regulator (RR). Downstream responses hinge on RR phosphorylation and can be highly stringent, acute, and sensitive because SHKs commonly exert both kinase and phosphatase activity. With a bacteriophytochrome TCS as a paradigm, we here interrogate how this catalytic duality underlies signal responses. Derivative systems exhibit tenfold higher red-light sensitivity, owing to an altered kinase-phosphatase balance. Modifications of the linker intervening the SHK sensor and catalytic entities likewise tilt this balance and provide TCSs with inverted output that increases under red light. These TCSs expand synthetic biology and showcase how deliberate perturbations of the kinase-phosphatase duality unlock altered signal-response regimes. Arguably, these aspects equally pertain to the engineering and the natural evolution of TCSs.
Main Authors
Format
Articles Research article
Published
2024
Series
Subjects
Publication in research information system
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
The permanent address of the publication
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-202406144671Use this for linking
Review status
Peer reviewed
ISSN
2041-1723
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-49251-8
Language
English
Published in
Nature Communications
Citation
  • Meier, S. S. M., Multamäki, E., Ranzani, A. T., Takala, H., & Möglich, A. (2024). Leveraging the histidine kinase-phosphatase duality to sculpt two-component signaling. Nature Communications, 15, Article 4876. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-49251-8
License
CC BY 4.0Open Access
Funder(s)
Research Council of Finland
Funding program(s)
Academy Research Fellow, AoF
Akatemiatutkija, SA
Research Council of Finland
Additional information about funding
We thank Dr. Q. Xu for cloning DmREDusk. We greatly appreciate financial support by the European Commission (FET Open NEUROPA, grant 863214 to A.M.), the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (grant MO2192/4-2 to A.M.), the Research Council of Finland (grant 330678 to H.T.), and the Finnish Cultural Foundation (grant 00220697 to E.M.). Publication fees partially funded by the Open Access Publishing Fund of the University of Bayreuth.
Copyright© The Author(s) 2024

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