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Control of the Escherichia coli Sialoregulon by Transcriptional Repressor NanR
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ABSTRACT
NanR, one of >8,500 GntR superfamily helix-turn-helix transcriptional regulators, controls expression of the genes required for catabolism of sialic acids in
Escherichia coli
. It is predicted to do the same in related bacteria harboring orthologs of
nanR
. The sialic acids are a family of over 40 naturally occurring nine-carbon keto-sugar acids found mainly in the animal lineage, which includes starfish to humans in the deuterostome lineage. Sialic acids function in development, immunity, protein localization and stability, and homeostasis. They also serve as microbial carbon and nitrogen sources and ligands for cell recognition during host colonization. The importance of microbial sialic acid metabolism for host-microbe interactions has made it a target for therapeutic development. Exploiting this target depends on understanding sialometabolic pathways in a wide range of evolutionarily distinct bacteria. Here, we show by transcriptome, genetic, and biochemical analyses that the most common sialic acid,
N
-acetylneuraminate, induces the
nanATEK-yhcH
,
yjhATS
(
nanCMS
), and
yjhBC
operons by directly inactivating NanR, converting the predominantly dimeric form of the repressor to an inactive monomer of approximately 30-kDa. Additionally, other results identify critical amino acid residues and nucleotides in the regulator and operator, respectively. The combined results better define how sialic acids, acting through NanR, affect the metabolic flux of an important group of host-derived metabolites. Thus,
E. coli
serves as a valuable model for understanding sialocatabolic pathways in bacteria.
American Society for Microbiology
Title: Control of the Escherichia coli Sialoregulon by Transcriptional Repressor NanR
Description:
ABSTRACT
NanR, one of >8,500 GntR superfamily helix-turn-helix transcriptional regulators, controls expression of the genes required for catabolism of sialic acids in
Escherichia coli
.
It is predicted to do the same in related bacteria harboring orthologs of
nanR
.
The sialic acids are a family of over 40 naturally occurring nine-carbon keto-sugar acids found mainly in the animal lineage, which includes starfish to humans in the deuterostome lineage.
Sialic acids function in development, immunity, protein localization and stability, and homeostasis.
They also serve as microbial carbon and nitrogen sources and ligands for cell recognition during host colonization.
The importance of microbial sialic acid metabolism for host-microbe interactions has made it a target for therapeutic development.
Exploiting this target depends on understanding sialometabolic pathways in a wide range of evolutionarily distinct bacteria.
Here, we show by transcriptome, genetic, and biochemical analyses that the most common sialic acid,
N
-acetylneuraminate, induces the
nanATEK-yhcH
,
yjhATS
(
nanCMS
), and
yjhBC
operons by directly inactivating NanR, converting the predominantly dimeric form of the repressor to an inactive monomer of approximately 30-kDa.
Additionally, other results identify critical amino acid residues and nucleotides in the regulator and operator, respectively.
The combined results better define how sialic acids, acting through NanR, affect the metabolic flux of an important group of host-derived metabolites.
Thus,
E.
coli
serves as a valuable model for understanding sialocatabolic pathways in bacteria.
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