4.8 Article

Molecular basis for the adaptive evolution of environment-sensing by H-NS proteins

Journal

ELIFE
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELIFE SCIENCES PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.7554/eLife.57467

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Funding

  1. King Abdullah University of Science and Technology [FCC/1/1976-25, FCC/1/1976-21]
  2. National Institutes of Health [R01GM129431]
  3. National Science Foundation [CHE-1945394]

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H-NS, a DNA-binding protein in gram-negative bacteria, plays a pleiotropic role in gene regulation by sensing temperature and other environmental factors. Comparison of H-NS orthologs from different bacteria species revealed how the same mechanism was adapted to specific habitats and lifestyles, with environment-sensing characteristics arising from specific intra- or intermolecular electrostatic interactions. This study clarifies the modus operandi for H-NS-mediated environmental sensing and suggests that this mechanism resulted from the exaptation of an ancestral protein feature.
The DNA-binding protein H-NS is a pleiotropic gene regulator in gram-negative bacteria. Through its capacity to sense temperature and other environmental factors, H-NS allows pathogens like Salmonella to adapt their gene expression to their presence inside or outside warmblooded hosts. To investigate how this sensing mechanism may have evolved to fit different bacterial lifestyles, we compared H-NS orthologs from bacteria that infect humans, plants, and insects, and from bacteria that live on a deep-sea hypothermal vent. The combination of biophysical characterization, high-resolution proton-less nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and molecular simulations revealed, at an atomistic level, how the same general mechanism was adapted to specific habitats and lifestyles. In particular, we demonstrate how environment-sensing characteristics arise from specifically positioned intra- or intermolecular electrostatic interactions. Our integrative approach clarified the exact modus operandi for H-NS-mediated environmental sensing and suggested that this sensing mechanism resulted from the exaptation of an ancestral protein feature.

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