AI Article Synopsis

  • Post-transcriptional control of protein abundance is crucial for how organisms adapt to their environments, and this text discusses a newly identified regulatory pathway involving RimK, RimA, RimB, and cyclic-di-GMP.
  • Disruption of the rimK gene negatively affects both motility and surface attachment in Pseudomonas species, impacting both commensal and pathogenic strains, which hinders their ability to colonize the soil or infect plants.
  • RimK's function as an ATP-dependent glutamyl ligase leads to changes in ribosomal protein levels and activity, influencing the proteome and allowing bacteria to respond dynamically to environmental challenges.

Article Abstract

Post-transcriptional control of protein abundance is a highly important, underexplored regulatory process by which organisms respond to their environments. Here we describe an important and previously unidentified regulatory pathway involving the ribosomal modification protein RimK, its regulator proteins RimA and RimB, and the widespread bacterial second messenger cyclic-di-GMP (cdG). Disruption of rimK affects motility and surface attachment in pathogenic and commensal Pseudomonas species, with rimK deletion significantly compromising rhizosphere colonisation by the commensal soil bacterium P. fluorescens, and plant infection by the pathogens P. syringae and P. aeruginosa. RimK functions as an ATP-dependent glutamyl ligase, adding glutamate residues to the C-terminus of ribosomal protein RpsF and inducing specific effects on both ribosome protein complement and function. Deletion of rimK in P. fluorescens leads to markedly reduced levels of multiple ribosomal proteins, and also of the key translational regulator Hfq. In turn, reduced Hfq levels induce specific downstream proteomic changes, with significant increases in multiple ABC transporters, stress response proteins and non-ribosomal peptide synthetases seen for both ΔrimK and Δhfq mutants. The activity of RimK is itself controlled by interactions with RimA, RimB and cdG. We propose that control of RimK activity represents a novel regulatory mechanism that dynamically influences interactions between bacteria and their hosts; translating environmental pressures into dynamic ribosomal changes, and consequently to an adaptive remodeling of the bacterial proteome.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4741518PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1005837DOI Listing

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