The ability to form a dormant spore is essential for the survival of the anaerobic, gastrointestinal pathogen outside of the mammalian gastrointestinal tract. The initiation of sporulation is governed by the master regulator of sporulation, Spo0A, which is activated by phosphorylation. Multiple sporulation factors control Spo0A phosphorylation; however, this regulatory pathway is not well defined in . We discovered that RgaS and RgaR, a conserved orphan histidine kinase and orphan response regulator, function together as a cognate two-component regulatory system to directly activate transcription of several genes. One of these targets, , encodes gene products that synthesize and export a small quorum-sensing peptide, AgrD1, which positively influences expression of early sporulation genes. Another target, a small regulatory RNA now known as SrsR, impacts later stages of sporulation through an unknown regulatory mechanism(s). Unlike Agr systems in many organisms, AgrD1 does not activate the RgaS-RgaR two-component system, and thus, is not responsible for autoregulating its own production. Altogether, we demonstrate that utilizes a conserved two-component system that is uncoupled from quorum-sensing to promote sporulation through two distinct regulatory pathways.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10327067 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.06.26.546640 | DOI Listing |
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