Low CyaA expression and anti‐cooperative binding of cAMP to CRP frames the scope of the cognate regulon of Pseudomonas putida
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Authors
Arce Rodríguez, Alejandro
Nikel Mayer, Pablo Iván
Calles, Belén
Chavarría Vargas, Max
Platero, Raúl
Krell, Tino
de Lorenzo, Víctor
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Abstract
Although the soil bacterium Pseudomonas putida
KT2440 bears a bona fide adenylate cyclase gene
(cyaA), intracellular concentrations of 30,50-cyclic
adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) are barely detectable.
By using reporter technology and direct quantification
of cAMP under various conditions, we show
that such low levels of the molecule stem from the
stringent regulation of its synthesis, efflux and degradation.
Poor production of cAMP was the result of
inefficient translation of cyaA mRNA. Moreover, deletion
of the cAMP-phosphodiesterase pde gene led to
intracellular accumulation of the cyclic nucleotide,
exposing an additional cause of cAMP drain in vivo.
But even such low levels of the signal sustained activation
of promoters dependent on the cAMP-receptor
protein (CRP). Genetic and biochemical evidence
indicated that the phenomenon ultimately rose from
the unusual binding parameters of cAMP to CRP.
This included an ultratight cAMP-CrpP. putida affinity
(KD of 45.0 3.4 nM) and an atypical 1:1 effector/
dimer stoichiometry that obeyed an infrequent anticooperative
binding mechanism. It thus seems that
keeping the same regulatory parts and their relational
logic but changing the interaction parameters
enables genetic devices to take over entirely different
domains of the functional landscape.
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Keywords
Pseudomonas putida, CRP, cAMP
Citation
https://sfamjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1462-2920.15422