1. Bacilli glutamate dehydrogenases diverged via coevolution of transcription and enzyme regulation.
- Author
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Noda-Garcia L, Romero Romero ML, Longo LM, Kolodkin-Gal I, and Tawfik DS
- Subjects
- Bacillus subtilis genetics, Bacillus subtilis growth & development, Bacterial Proteins genetics, Genetic Fitness, Glutamic Acid metabolism, Mutation, Promoter Regions, Genetic, Bacillus subtilis enzymology, Biological Coevolution, Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial, Glutamate Dehydrogenase genetics
- Abstract
The linkage between regulatory elements of transcription, such as promoters, and their protein products is central to gene function. Promoter-protein coevolution is therefore expected, but rarely observed, and the manner by which these two regulatory levels are linked remains largely unknown. We study glutamate dehydrogenase-a hub of carbon and nitrogen metabolism. In Bacillus subtilis , two paralogues exist: GudB is constitutively transcribed whereas RocG is tightly regulated. In their active, oligomeric states, both enzymes show similar enzymatic rates. However, swaps of enzymes and promoters cause severe fitness losses, thus indicating promoter-enzyme coevolution. Characterization of the proteins shows that, compared to RocG, GudB's enzymatic activity is highly dependent on glutamate and pH Promoter-enzyme swaps therefore result in excessive glutamate degradation when expressing a constitutive enzyme under a constitutive promoter, or insufficient activity when both the enzyme and its promoter are tightly regulated. Coevolution of transcriptional and enzymatic regulation therefore underlies paralogue-specific spatio-temporal control, especially under diverse growth conditions., (© 2017 The Authors.)
- Published
- 2017
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