4.7 Article

Bacillus subtilis Stressosome Sensor Protein Sequences Govern the Ability To Distinguish among Environmental Stressors and Elicit Different σB Response Profiles

Journal

MBIO
Volume 13, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/mbio.02001-22

Keywords

microfluidics; sigma factors; signal transduction; stress proteins; stress response

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health
  2. [R35GM138018]

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Bacterial survival depends on appropriate responses to diverse stressors. The environmental model bacterium Bacillus subtilis uses stressosomes to sense environmental stressors and enact the general stress response. Different RsbR paralogs show distinct response magnitude and timing, and can distinguish among stressors.
Bacterial survival depends on appropriate responses to diverse stressors. The general stress-response system in the environmental model bacterium Bacillus subtilis is constantly poised for an immediate response and uses unusual stress-sensing protein complexes called stressosomes. Bacteria use a variety of systems to sense stress and mount an appropriate response to ensure fitness and survival. Bacillus subtilis uses stressosomes-cytoplasmic multiprotein complexes-to sense environmental stressors and enact the general stress response by activating the alternative sigma factor sigma(B). Each stressosome includes 40 RsbR proteins, representing four paralogous (RsbRA, RsbRB, RsbRC, and RsbRD) putative stress sensors. Population-level analyses suggested that the RsbR paralogs are largely redundant, while our prior work using microfluidics-coupled fluorescence microscopy uncovered differences among the RsbR paralogs' sigma(B) response profiles with respect to timing and intensity when facing an identical stressor. Here, we use a similar approach to address the question of whether the sigma(B) responses mediated by each paralog differ in the presence of different environmental stressors: can they distinguish among stressors? Wild-type cells (with all four paralogs) and RsbRA-only cells activate sigma(B) with characteristic transient response timing irrespective of stressor but show various response magnitudes. However, cells with other individual RsbR paralogs show distinct timing and magnitude in their responses to ethanol, salt, oxidative, and acid stress, implying that RsbR proteins can distinguish among stressors. Experiments with hybrid fusion proteins comprising the N-terminal half of one paralog and the C-terminal half of another argue that the N-terminal identity influences response magnitude and that determinants in both halves of RsbRA are important for its stereotypical transient sigma(B) response timing.IMPORTANCE Bacterial survival depends on appropriate responses to diverse stressors. The general stress-response system in the environmental model bacterium Bacillus subtilis is constantly poised for an immediate response and uses unusual stress-sensing protein complexes called stressosomes. Stressosomes typically contain four different types of putative sensing protein. We asked whether each type of sensor has a distinct role in mediating response dynamics to different environmental stressors. We find that one sensor type always mediates a transient response, while the others show distinct response magnitude and timing to different stressors. We also find that a transient response is exceptional, as several engineered hybrid proteins did not show strong transient responses. Our work reveals functional distinctions among subunits of the stressosome complex and represents a step toward understanding how the general stress response of B. subtilis ensures its survival in natural environmental settings.

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