Lysobacter PilR, the Regulator of Type IV Pilus Synthesis, Controls Antifungal Antibiotic Production via a Cyclic di-GMP Pathway
2. Zero hunger
0303 health sciences
Antifungal Agents
Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial
03 medical and health sciences
Lysobacter
Bacterial Proteins
Fimbriae, Bacterial
Multigene Family
Mutation
Cyclic GMP
Soil Microbiology
Gene Library
Signal Transduction
DOI:
10.1128/aem.03397-16
Publication Date:
2017-01-14T02:40:30Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
ABSTRACT
Lysobacter enzymogenes
is a ubiquitous soil gammaproteobacterium that produces a broad-spectrum antifungal antibiotic, known as heat-stable antifungal factor (HSAF). To increase HSAF production for use against fungal crop diseases, it is important to understand how HSAF synthesis is regulated. To gain insights into transcriptional regulation of the HSAF synthesis gene cluster, we generated a library with deletion mutations in the genes predicted to encode response regulators of the two-component signaling systems in
L. enzymogenes
strain OH11. By quantifying HSAF production levels in the 45 constructed mutants, we identified two strains that produced significantly smaller amounts of HSAF. One of the mutations affected a gene encoding a conserved bacterial response regulator, PilR, which is commonly associated with type IV pilus synthesis. We determined that
L. enzymogenes
PilR regulates pilus synthesis and twitching motility via a traditional pathway, by binding to the
pilA
promoter and upregulating
pilA
expression. Regulation of HSAF production by PilR was found to be independent of pilus formation. We discovered that the
pilR
mutant contained significantly higher intracellular levels of the second messenger cyclic di-GMP (c-di-GMP) and that this was the inhibitory signal for HSAF production. Therefore, the type IV pilus regulator PilR in
L. enzymogenes
activates twitching motility while downregulating antibiotic HSAF production by increasing intracellular c-di-GMP levels. This study identifies a new role of a common pilus regulator in proteobacteria and provides guidance for increasing antifungal antibiotic production in
L. enzymogenes
.
IMPORTANCE
PilR is a widespread response regulator of the two-component system known for regulating type IV pilus synthesis in proteobacteria. Here we report that, in the soil bacterium
Lysobacter enzymogenes
, PilR regulates pilus synthesis and twitching motility, as expected. Unexpectedly, PilR was also found to control intracellular levels of the second messenger c-di-GMP, which in turn inhibits production of the antifungal antibiotic HSAF. The coordinated production of type IV pili and antifungal antibiotics has not been observed previously.
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