Control of bacterial exoelectrogenesis by c-AMP-GMP

James W. Nelson, Narasimhan Sudarsan(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Grace E. Phillips(Institute of Molecular Biology and Biophysics), Shira Stav(Institut thématique Génétique, génomique et bioinformatique), Christina E. Weinberg(Institut thématique Génétique, génomique et bioinformatique), Phillip J. McCown(Institut thématique Génétique, génomique et bioinformatique), Ronald R. Breaker(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
April 6, 2015
Cited by 118Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Major changes in bacterial physiology including biofilm and spore formation involve signaling by the cyclic dinucleotides c-di-GMP and c-di-AMP. Recently, another second messenger dinucleotide, c-AMP-GMP, was found to control chemotaxis and colonization by Vibrio cholerae. We have identified a superregulon of genes controlled by c-AMP-GMP in numerous Deltaproteobacteria, including Geobacter species that use extracellular insoluble metal oxides as terminal electron acceptors. This exoelectrogenic process has been studied for its possible utility in energy production and bioremediation. Many genes involved in adhesion, pilin formation, and others that are important for exoelectrogenesis are controlled by members of a variant riboswitch class that selectively bind c-AMP-GMP. These RNAs constitute, to our knowledge, the first known specific receptors for c-AMP-GMP and reveal that this molecule is used by many bacteria to control specialized physiological processes.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis