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DarA-the central processing unit for the integration of osmotic with potassium and amino acid homeostasis in . | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cyclic di-adenosine monophosphate (c-di-AMP) is a crucial second messenger in bacteria that helps regulate osmolyte uptake, cell wall stability, and resistance to stress, and DarA is a receptor protein for c-di-AMP that plays a key role in the cell's response to osmotic stress.
  • The study finds that DarA is essential for bacteria to adapt to extreme potassium limitation and salt stress, indicating its importance in maintaining osmotic balance.
  • Additionally, compensatory mechanisms, including the accumulation of osmoprotectants and mutations affecting metabolic pathways, show a complex interaction between osmotic stress response and metabolic processes.

Article Abstract

Cyclic di-adenosine monophosphate (c-di-AMP) is a second messenger involved in diverse metabolic processes including osmolyte uptake, cell wall homeostasis, as well as antibiotic and heat resistance. This study investigates the role of the c-di-AMP receptor protein DarA in the osmotic stress response in . Through a series of experiments, we demonstrate that DarA plays a central role in the cellular response to osmotic fluctuations. Our findings show that DarA becomes essential under extreme potassium limitation as well as upon salt stress, highlighting its significance in mediating osmotic stress adaptation. Suppressor screens with mutants reveal compensatory mechanisms involving the accumulation of osmoprotectants, particularly potassium and citrulline. Mutations affecting various metabolic pathways, including the citric acid cycle as well as glutamate and arginine biosynthesis, indicate a complex interplay between the osmotic stress response and metabolic regulation. In addition, the growth defects of the mutant during potassium starvation and salt stress in a strain lacking the high-affinity potassium uptake systems KimA and KtrAB can be rescued by increased affinity of the remaining potassium channel KtrCD or by increased expression of thus resulting in increased potassium uptake. Finally, the mutant can respond to salt stress by the increased expression of MleN , which can export sodium ions.IMPORTANCEEnvironmental bacteria are exposed to rapidly changing osmotic conditions making an effective adaptation to these changes crucial for the survival of the cells. In Gram-positive bacteria, the second messenger cyclic di-AMP plays a key role in this adaptation by controlling (i) the influx of physiologically compatible organic osmolytes and (ii) the biosynthesis of such osmolytes. In several bacteria, cyclic di-adenosine monophosphate (c-di-AMP) can bind to a signal transduction protein, called DarA, in . So far, no function for DarA has been discovered in any organism. We have identified osmotically challenging conditions that make DarA essential and have identified suppressor mutations that help the bacteria to adapt to those conditions. Our results indicate that DarA is a central component in the integration of osmotic stress with the synthesis of compatible amino acid osmolytes and with the homeostasis of potassium, the first response to osmotic stress.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11270874PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jb.00190-24DOI Listing

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