Sensing of intracellular Hcp levels controls T6SS expression in .

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

Department of Ecosystem and Public Health, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB T2N 4Z6, Canada;

Published: June 2021

The type 6 secretion system (T6SS) is a bacterial weapon broadly distributed in gram-negative bacteria and used to kill competitors and predators. Featuring a long and double-tubular structure, this molecular machine is energetically costly to produce and thus is likely subject to diverse regulation strategies that are largely ill defined. In this study, we report a quantity-sensing control of the T6SS that down-regulates the expression of secreted components when they accumulate in the cytosol due to T6SS inactivation. Using strains that constitutively express an active T6SS, we demonstrate that mRNA levels of secreted components, including the inner-tube protein component Hcp, were down-regulated in T6SS structural gene mutants while expression of the main structural genes remained unchanged. Deletion of both gene copies restored expression from their promoters, while Hcp overexpression negatively impacted expression. We show that Hcp directly interacts with the RpoN-dependent T6SS regulator VasH, and deleting the N-terminal regulator domain of VasH abolishes this interaction as well as the expression difference of operons between T6SS-active and inactive strains. We find that negative regulation of also occurs in other strains and the pathogens and This Hcp-dependent sensing control is likely an important energy-conserving mechanism that enables T6SS-encoding organisms to quickly adjust T6SS expression and prevent wasteful build-up of its major secreted components in the absence of their efficient export out of the bacterial cell.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8237632PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2104813118DOI Listing

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