AI Article Synopsis

  • * Researchers focused on the GbdR transcription factor, which is essential for the breakdown of choline and GB, discovering it regulates 26 genes linked to choline metabolism and transport.
  • * The study revealed that GbdR binds to specific gene promoters, including the acetylcholine esterase gene choE, indicating GbdR’s crucial role in connecting bacterial metabolism to virulence, along with the potential functions of two previously uncharacterized genes in this process.

Article Abstract

Pseudomonas aeruginosa displays tremendous metabolic diversity, controlled in part by the abundance of transcription regulators in the genome. We have been investigating P. aeruginosa's response to the host, particularly changes regulated by the host-derived quaternary amines choline and glycine betaine (GB). We previously identified GbdR as an AraC family transcription factor that directly regulates choline acquisition from host phospholipids (via binding to plcH and pchP promoters), is required for catabolism of the choline metabolite GB, and is an activator that induces transcription in response to GB or dimethylglycine. Our goal was to characterize the GbdR regulon in P. aeruginosa by using genetics and chemical biology in combination with transcriptomics and in vitro DNA-binding assays. Here we show that GbdR activation regulates transcription of 26 genes from 12 promoters, 11 of which have measureable binding to GbdR in vitro. The GbdR regulon includes the genes encoding GB, dimethylglycine, sarcosine, glycine, and serine catabolic enzymes and the BetX and CbcXWV quaternary amine transport proteins. We characterized the GbdR consensus binding site and used it to identify that the recently characterized acetylcholine esterase gene, choE (PA4921), is also regulated by GbdR. The regulon member not directly controlled by GbdR is the secreted lipase gene lipA, which was also the only regulon member repressed under GbdR-activating conditions. Determination of the GbdR regulon provides deeper understanding of how GbdR links bacterial metabolism and virulence. Additionally, identification of two uncharacterized regulon members suggests roles for these proteins in response to choline metabolites.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3911141PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JB.01055-13DOI Listing

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