A Small Membrane Protein Inhibitor of the PhoQ/PhoP System in Escherichia Coli
Abstract
The PhoQ/PhoP signaling system responds to low magnesium and the presence of certain cationic antimicrobial peptides, and regulates genes important for growth under these conditions, as well as additional genes important for virulence in many gram-negative pathogens. PhoQ is a sensor kinase that phosphorylates and activates the transcription factor PhoP. Since feedback inhibition is a common theme in stress-response circuits, we hypothesized that some members of the PhoP regulon may play such a role in the PhoQ/PhoP pathway. We therefore screened for PhoP-regulated genes that mediate feedback in this system. We found that deletion of mgrB (yobG), which encodes a 47 amino acid peptide in Escherichia coli, results in a potent increase in PhoP-regulated transcription. In addition, over-expression of mgrB decreased transcription at both high and low concentrations of magnesium. Localization and bacterial two-hybrid studies suggest that MgrB resides in the inner-membrane and interacts directly with PhoQ. We further show that MgrB homologs from Salmonella typhimurium and Yersinia pestis also repress PhoP-regulated transcription in these organisms. Our results indicate that MgrB is a membrane peptide that is a critical mediator of negative feedback on the PhoQ/PhoP system, and that its function in this important signaling system is broadly conserved.
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