Complex general stress response regulation in Sphingomonas melonis Fr1 revealed by transcriptional analyses


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Date

2019

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

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Data

Abstract

The general stress response (GSR) represents an important trait to survive in the environment by leading to multiple stress resistance. In alphaproteobacteria, the GSR is under the transcriptional control of the alternative sigma factor EcfG. Here we performed transcriptome analyses to investigate the genes controlled by EcfG of Sphingomonas melonis Fr1 and the plasticity of this regulation under stress conditions. We found that EcfG regulates genes for proteins that are typically associated with stress responses. Moreover, EcfG controls regulatory proteins, which likely fine-tune the GSR. Among these, we identified a novel negative GSR feedback regulator, termed NepR2, on the basis of gene reporter assays, phenotypic analyses, and biochemical assays. Transcriptional profiling of signaling components upstream of EcfG under complex stress conditions showed an overall congruence with EcfG-regulated genes. Interestingly however, we found that the GSR is transcriptionally linked to the regulation of motility and biofilm formation via the single domain response regulator SdrG and GSR-activating histidine kinases. Altogether, our findings indicate that the GSR in S. melonis Fr1 underlies a complex regulation to optimize resource allocation and resilience in stressful and changing environments.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

9 (1)

Pages / Article No.

9404

Publisher

Nature

Event

Edition / version

Methods

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Date collected

Date created

Subject

Organisational unit

03740 - Vorholt, Julia / Vorholt, Julia check_circle

Notes

Funding

152835 - Investigation of the alphaproteobacterial general stress response in the context of the phyllosphere environment (SNF)

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