Cell Fate Regulation Governed by a Repurposed Bacterial Histidine Kinase

W. Seth Childers(Stanford University), Qingping Xu(SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory), Thomas H. Mann(Stanford University), Irimpan I. Mathews(SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory), Jimmy A. Blair(Stanford University), Ashley M. Deacon(SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory), Lucy Shapiro(Stanford University)
PLoS Biology
October 28, 2014
Cited by 71Open Access
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Abstract

One of the simplest organisms to divide asymmetrically is the bacterium Caulobacter crescentus. The DivL pseudo-histidine kinase, positioned at one cell pole, regulates cell-fate by controlling the activation of the global transcription factor CtrA via an interaction with the response regulator (RR) DivK. DivL uniquely contains a tyrosine at the histidine phosphorylation site, and can achieve these regulatory functions in vivo without kinase activity. Determination of the DivL crystal structure and biochemical analysis of wild-type and site-specific DivL mutants revealed that the DivL PAS domains regulate binding specificity for DivK∼P over DivK, which is modulated by an allosteric intramolecular interaction between adjacent domains. We discovered that DivL's catalytic domains have been repurposed as a phosphospecific RR input sensor, thereby reversing the flow of information observed in conventional histidine kinase (HK)-RR systems and coupling a complex network of signaling proteins for cell-fate regulation.


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