4.7 Article

PclR is a transcriptional activator of the gene that encodes the pneumococcal collagen-like protein PclA

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-15758-7

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Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation [PID2019-104553RB-C21]

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In this study, it was found that PclR in the Streptococcus pneumoniae genome is a transcriptional activator that stimulates transcription of the pclA gene by binding to a specific DNA site. PclR shares common features with MgaSpn but has different DNA-binding specificities, indicating distinct regulatory roles of these proteins.
The Gram-positive bacterium Streptococcus pneumoniae is a major human pathogen that shows high levels of genetic variability. The pneumococcal R6 genome harbours several gene clusters that are not present in all strains of the species. One of these clusters contains two divergent genes, pclA, which encodes a putative surface-exposed protein that contains large regions of collagen-like repeats, and spr1404 (here named pclR). PclA was shown to mediate pneumococcal adherence to host cells in vitro. In this work, we demonstrate that PclR (494 amino acids) is a transcriptional activator. It stimulates transcription of the pclA gene by binding to a specific DNA site upstream of the core promoter. In addition, we show that PclR has common features with the MgaSpn transcriptional regulator (493 amino acids), which is also encoded by the R6 genome. These proteins have high sequence similarity (60.3%), share the same organization of predicted functional domains, and generate multimeric complexes on linear double-stranded DNAs. However, on the PpclA promoter region, MgaSpn binds to a site different from the one recognized by PclR. Our results indicate that PclR and MgaSpn have similar DNA-binding properties but different DNA-binding specificities, pointing to a different regulatory role of both proteins.

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