Lecture 6 Stress Responses II Flashcards

1
Q

Overview of sigma factors

A

Most genes in E. coli require the standard sigma factors σ70 (or RpoD) for transcription

Alternative sigma factors recognise different promoter sequences

Consequently, expression of gene families can be controlled by regulating the availability of the corresponding sigma factor

Achieved by:

  • Changing the rate of synthesis of the sigma factors
  • Changing the rate of degradation of the sigma factors
  • Through the activity of anti-sigma factors
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2
Q

RpoS – master regulator of general stress response

A

RpoS (σ38) controls the response to multiple stresses, and its activity can be influenced at every level

Directly or indirectly, RpoS can regulate approx. 10% of the bacterial genome

Multiple stresses can influence the production of RpoS protein, which (as an alternative sigma factor) acts as a master regulator of the general stress response.

A reduced growth rate enhances the rate of RpoS transcription, consistent with the fact that RpoS plays a role in adapting to stationary phase.

The rate of translation of the resulting mRNA is enhanced (often by altering the secondary structure of the mRNA) by multiple stimuli including high cell density, low temperature, high osmolarity and acidic pH.

Ordinarily, the rate of proteolysis of RpoS protein is extremely fast. However, high osmolarity, acidic pH, carbon starvation and high temperature all act to repress the proteolysis of RpoS, thus boosting the levels of active RpoS protein.

Therefore, together, these multiple stresses can function to boost the levels of RpoS and thus promote the activation of RpoS-dependent genes.

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3
Q

Overview of Salmonella infection

A

Stressors encountered include:
acidic pH
Reactive oxygen & nitrogen species
Nutrient limitation

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4
Q

RpoS phenotypes in Salmonella

A

In addition to facilitating adaptation to stressors, RpoS can also directly regulate certain virulence factors

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5
Q

Teasing apart the integration of stress responses

A

Adaptor proteins direct protein substrates to proteases for degradation

RssB is an adaptor protein for RpoS (σS), directing it to the ClpXP protease

IraP, IraM & IraD are anti-adaptor proteins that inhibit RssB, stabilizing RpoS

(p)ppGpp activates IraP, whilst the PhoP-PhoQ TCS activates IraM

A protein called RssB is an adaptor protein for RpoS, the master regulator of general stress.

When phosphorylated, RssB targets RpoS to the ClpXP protease, thus promoting RpoS degradation. The kinase ArcB has been implicated in the phosphorylation of RssB. ArcB monitors the cellular energy state, and so during energy starvation the phosphorylation of RssB by ArcB is reduced, leading to reduced proteolysis of RpoS.

Adaptor proteins can themselves by regulated by anti-adaptor proteins. In the case of RssB, various distinct stress signals promote the synthesis of anti-adaptor proteins that inhibit RssB function. These anti-adaptors include IraP, IraM and IraD. By inhibiting RssB, they promote the stability of RpoS as it is no longer targeted for proteolysis. IraP is activated by the stringent response we discussed previously. IraM is activated by a two-component system PhoPQ that can facilitate adaptation to acidic conditions as well as magnesium limitation.

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6
Q

The RpoE (σE) envelope stress response

A

Role of RpoE is to maintain integrity & function of cell envelope

RpoE is activated by stresses that trigger envelope stress and generate unfolded envelope proteins

Results in the activation/induction of:
Periplasmic folding machinery
Proteases
Lipid A biosynthesis
Lipoproteins
Proteins with periplasmic functions
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7
Q

Regulators of RpoE (σE) activity

A

Cytoplasmic RpoE responds to stress signals in the cell envelope

RseA is the anti-sigma factor of RpoE
RseB stabilizes RseA and enhances its activity
DegS and YaeL form a proteolytic cascade – both are inhibited by their own PDZ domains

Sigma-E is cytoplasmic, but responds to stresses that occur within the periplasmic region of the cell envelope. How is that managed?

This slide shows the factors that regulate sigmaE activation. Ordinarily, in the absence of stress, sigma-E is inhibited by the major negative regulator RseA which acts as an anti-sigma factor. RseB co-operates in this process, through either stabilizing RseA or enhancing RseA activity. DegS and YaeL have proteolytic activity, but they are ordinarily inactive, being inhibited by their own PDZ domains.

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8
Q

Pathway of RpoE (σE ) activation

A

The envelope stress response is characterized by the accumulation of unfolded outer membrane proteins in the periplasm.

The C-terminal domain of these unfolded proteins interacts with the PDZ domain of DegS, relieving the PDZ-mediated inhibition of DegS proteolytic activity. The active DegS then cleaves the periplasmic domain of RseA. In a similar manner, YaeL cleaves the cytoplasmic domain of RseA, although the precise mechanism by which YaeL becomes activated is unknown. It is possible that the loss of the periplasmic domain of RseA lifts the inhibition that is normally imposed by YaeL’s PDZ domain. This sequential cleavage of RseA releases sigmaE within the cytoplasm

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9
Q

Phenotypes associated with RpoE in Salmonella

A

The RpoE mutant shows increased sensitivity to hydrogen peroxide compared to the wildtype.

The RpoE mutant is also impaired in its ability to survive within macrophages. The rpoE-comp strain has the rpoE gene restored on a plasmid (i.e. the mutant has been complemented). This confirms that by restoring RpoE function, we can restore the ability of the bacteria to survive within the macrophages.

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10
Q

Phenotypes associated with RpoE in Salmonella

A

The LD50 (dose required to kill 50% of mice) is significantly higher for the rpoE mutant than for the wildtype, regardless of the route of infection

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11
Q

Dealing with unfolded proteins in the cytoplasm

A

Elevated temperatures impact protein stability & can lead to unfolding

The ‘heat-shock response’ broadly falls into two categories:

Molecular chaperones
Prevent aggregation of newly synthesized protein and catalyze the correct folding of proteins
- DnaK-DnaJ-GrpE
- GroEL-GroES

Proteases
Remove denatured / irreversibly aggregated proteins
- ClpXP
- Lon, FtsH

There are two central components to the heat-shock response. Molecular chaperones assist the correct folding of proteins, whilst proteases remove denatured/aggregated proteins.

The ClpXP complex consists of the ClpX ATPase and the ClpP protease. The ATP-dependent chaperone activity of ClpX transfers the protein into the proteolytic chamber of the associated self-compartmentalized protease, ClpP. The ATPase provides the energy for protein unfolding and translocation into the ClpP protease complex. Whilst the basic principle is the same, there are other AAA+ proteases that combine the ‘unfoldase’ and protease activities within a single protein (e.g. Lon and FtsH proteases).

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12
Q

GroE chaperone – GroEL & GroES

A

Provides a sequestered space & functional assistance for protein folding

GroEL comprises 14 identical subunits (2 rings of 7)
Forms a highly hydrophilic chamber

GroES forms a cap on the chamber, creating an enclosed space.

A major component of the heat shock response is the GroE chaperone machine, which comprises of GroEL and GroES. The GroEL complex comprises 14 identical subunits, arranged in two rings of 7 subunits. These rings are stacked back-to-back, forming a chamber-like structure. GroES forms a cap on the chamber, creating an enclosed space. This chamber is highly hydrophilic.

Ordinarily, hydrophobic residues within a correctly folded protein will be buried within the protein. In contrast, a protein that is unfolded (or incorrectly folded) will have exposed hydrophobic residues. The unfolded protein binds GroEL, and is subsequently released into the hydrophilic chamber. This confined hydrophilic space then promotes the proper folding of the polypeptide, so that the hydrophobic residues are buried within the protein. ATP hydrolysis occurs in this ring during folding of the polypeptide.

Both rings of GroEL have chaperone activity, but they work independently of each other (and slightly out-of-phase in a co-ordinated fashion).

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13
Q

RpoH (σ32) regulates the heat-shock response

A

Basal level of RpoH is present in cells at low temperature

Within 5 min. of shift to high temp, there is a 20-fold increase:

Enhanced rate of translation (2° structure of mRNA)
Increased stability of RpoH (t1/2 1min  t1/2 4-5 min)

Although present at a low basal level within the bacterial cell, a shift of the cell to a higher temperature results in the very rapid increase of RpoH (sigma-H) levels within the cell. This is achieved through two mechanisms.

Firstly, there is an enhanced rate of translation of the rpoH mRNA (due to altered secondary structure at the higher temperature).

Additionally, the resulting protein has increased stability, and so has a much longer half-life. Ordinarily the half-life of RpoH is short, due to its association with the DnaK chaperone complex which targets the RpoH protein for degradation by a protease called FtsH. However, under heat-shock conditions, the DnaK chaperone complex preferentially binds to unfolded protein, thus releasing RpoH from its targeted degradation.

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14
Q

Sigma factors - targets for novel antimicrobials?

A

Pivotal for stress responses & direct regulation of some virulence factors
Bacteria-specific
Not bactericidal, so perhaps lower selective pressure for resistance

Numerous potential strategies (both direct and indirect) for inhibiting sigma factor activity

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15
Q

Blocking holoenzyme assembly

A

Investigated a plasmid library encoding cyclic peptides (potential inhibitors)
Generate a σE reporter strain of E. coli
Transform this strain with the plasmid library
Do any cyclic peptides inhibit the σE reporter?

Peptide SI24 identified as the first direct inhibitor of a sigma factor
Apparently inhibits assembly of the holoenzyme

However, SI24 was ineffective when added exogenously to bacterial cultures

In an in vitro transcription reaction, SI24 blocks transcription by inhibiting assembly of the holoenzyme (the complex formed by the RNA polymerase enzyme and the sigma factor).

In E. coli, SI24 can be expressed from a plasmid (as it is a peptide, it can be encoded by a gene). This was assessed by using a GFP reporter strain in which the gene encoding GFP was placed under the control of a sigmaE-dependent promoter. In that reporter strain, expression of SI24 reduced GFP expression.

However, purified SI24 fails to inhibit sigmaE activity when added to a culture of E. coli as it is unable to penetrate the cell envelope or unable to accumulate to sufficient concentrations within the cytoplasm

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16
Q

An RpoN ‘molecular roadblock’

A

Lloyd et al. (2017) generated a plasmid encoding a peptide that corresponded to the last 60 amino acids of RpoN, termed RpoN*
Binds (and blocks) the RpoN consensus sequencxe

The C-terminal domain of RpoN contains the region that binds the RpoN-responsive promoter, in particular, the -24 consensus sequence. Lloyd et al. therefore generated a plasmid that expressed just this C-terminal domain – a 60 amino acid peptide that effectively binds the -24 consensus sequence.

This peptide alone generates a helix-turn-helix motif, as widely-documented feature of DNA-binding proteins.

By binding to the -24 consensus sequence, RpoN* not only blocks the ability of native RpoN to bind to the promoter, it will also prevent the read-through of other RNAP holoenzymes that have initiated transcription from promoters upstream.

17
Q

An RpoN ‘molecular roadblock’

A

Plasmid expressing RpoN* was transformed into Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Resulted in differential expression of approx. 700 genes
Reduced activity of numerous virulence determinants

Expression of RpoN* within Pseudomonas aeruginosa had a profound effect on gene expression and the activity of several key virulence factors.

The graphs show four such virulence phenotypes. Swimming motility (mediated by bacterial flagella) is reduced following RpoN* expression. Elastase and pyocyanin are two secreted virulence factors (refer to slide 14, Lecture 3). Pyoverdine is a molecule called a siderophore. It is an iron-chelating molecule that Pseudomonas uses to scavenge iron from the environment. Iron is essential for bacterial growth & survival (as it is for all life forms). Elastase, pyoverdine and pyocyanin are all reduced by RpoN* expression.

In the assay shown above, wildtype P. aeruginosa caused rapid killing of the C. elegans, whilst bacteria expressing RpoN* were almost entirely avirulent (very similar to the control inoculum). As a comparison, the lasR quorum sensing mutant (refer to Lecture 3) was included in this assay, showing the RpoN* induced the same level of attenuation as a QS-deficient mutant.

18
Q

Preventing dissociation from anti-sigma factor

A

Palmer et al. screened a small molecule library directly against a σB reporter strain of Listeria monocytogenes
Identified FPSS as a specific inhibitor of σB activity in Listeria & Bacillus
Subsequent studies revealed FPSS prevents σB dissociation from RsbW

FPSS, Fluoro-phenyl-styrene-sulphonamide

By screening small molecules directly against a reporter strain of your organism of interest, you are (by definition) screening for active compounds that can actually get into the bacterial cell and exert their effect. This overcomes the shortcomings of approaches where you are reliant on expressing the molecules within the bacterial cells themselves.

Palmer et al (2011) identified FPSS as a sigma-B inhibitor of Listeria and Bacillus. It was a subsequent study [Ringus et al (2013) J Bacteriol. 195(11):2509-17] that provided evidence that FPSS prevents dissociation of Sigma-B from its anti-sigma factor, RsbW.

19
Q

Preventing dissociation from anti-sigma factor

A

Pretreatment of Listeria with FPSS impaired their ability to invade epithelial cells

In this experiment, Palmer et al. assessed how FPSS affected the ability of Listeria to invade human epithelial cells. For this experiment, the bacteria were pre-treated with FPSS (i.e. they were cultured in the presence or absence of FPSS prior to being added to the epithelial cells).

FPSS pre-treatment reduced the invasiveness of Listeria, although not quite to the same level as the sigB mutant.

20
Q

Conclusions

A

Alternative sigma factors play a critical role in bacterial stress responses

Ordinarily present at basal levels, but rapidly accumulate in response to stress through a variety of mechanisms

Given their pivotal role (and the fact that they are unique to bacteria), sigma factors are attractive targets for novel antimicrobials