1. A central role for the transcriptional regulator VtlR in small RNA-mediated gene regulation in Agrobacterium tumefaciens
- Author
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Clayton C. Caswell, James A. Budnick, Pawel Michalak, Li Luo, John. F. Pinto, Kevin C. Failor, Miranda. J. Ginder, Lin Kang, Kirsten A. Kohl, Jason E. Heindl, Julia. M. Perkowski, Lauren M. Sheehan, and Biomedical Sciences and Pathobiology
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Small RNA ,Transcription, Genetic ,030106 microbiology ,lcsh:Medicine ,Biology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Bacterial Proteins ,Transcription (biology) ,Bacterial genetics ,Gene expression ,Bacterial transcription ,Transcriptional regulation ,RNA-Seq ,lcsh:Science ,Gene ,Genetics ,Regulation of gene expression ,Sinorhizobium meliloti ,Multidisciplinary ,lcsh:R ,Bacteriology ,Agrobacterium tumefaciens ,Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ,biology.organism_classification ,RNA, Bacterial ,030104 developmental biology ,lcsh:Q - Abstract
LysR-type transcriptional regulators (LTTRs) are the most common type of transcriptional regulators in prokaryotes and function by altering gene expression in response to environmental stimuli. In the class Alphaproteobacteria, a conserved LTTR named VtlR is critical to the establishment of host-microbe interactions. In the mammalian pathogen Brucella abortus, VtlR is required for full virulence in a mouse model of infection, and VtlR activates the expression of abcR2, which encodes a small regulatory RNA (sRNA). In the plant symbiont Sinorhizobium meliloti, the ortholog of VtlR, named LsrB, is involved in the symbiosis of the bacterium with alfalfa. Agrobacterium tumefaciens is a close relative of both B. abortus and S. meliloti, and this bacterium is the causative agent of crown gall disease in plants. In the present study, we demonstrate that VtlR is involved in the ability of A. tumefaciens to grow appropriately in artificial medium, and an A. tumefaciens vtlR deletion strain is defective in motility, biofilm formation, and tumorigenesis of potato discs. RNA-sequencing analyses revealed that more than 250 genes are dysregulated in the vtlR strain, and importantly, VtlR directly controls the expression of three sRNAs in A. tumefaciens. Taken together, these data support a model in which VtlR indirectly regulates hundreds of genes via manipulation of sRNA pathways in A. tumefaciens, and moreover, while the VtlR/LsrB protein is present and structurally conserved in many members of the Alphaproteobacteria, the VtlR/LsrB regulatory circuitry has diverged in order to accommodate the unique environmental niche of each organism. One Health Grant from the Edward Via College of Osteopathic Medicine; W.W. Smith Charitable Trust [H1804]; NIH/NIGMSUnited States Department of Health & Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health (NIH) - USANIH National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) [1R15GM135933-01]; Melvin Firman Undergraduate Summer Research Grant from the University of the Sciences in Philadelphia; Arno Viehover Undergraduate Tuition Scholarship from the University of the Sciences in Philadelphia We would like to thank Tristan Stoyanof for assistance with EMSAs and annotation of RNA-seq data. We would like to thank Gilda Bocco, Rachel Kesselring, and Hayleigh Monroe for assistance with swimming motility and biofilm formation assays. This work was funded by a One Health Grant from the Edward Via College of Osteopathic Medicine (CCC), Grant H1804 from the W.W. Smith Charitable Trust (JEH), and Grant 1R15GM135933-01 from the NIH/NIGMS (JEH), and we are very grateful for this financial support. MJG was supported by a Melvin Firman Undergraduate Summer Research Grant and an Arno Viehover Undergraduate Tuition Scholarship, both from the University of the Sciences in Philadelphia.
- Published
- 2020