Login / Signup

A cryptic oxidoreductase safeguards oxidative protein folding in Corynebacterium diphtheriae .

Melissa E Reardon-RobinsonMinh Tan NguyenBelkys C SanchezJerzy OsipiukChristian RückertChungyu ChangBo ChenRahul NagvekarAndrzej JoachimiakAndreas TauchAsis DasHung Ton-That
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2023)
In many gram-positive Actinobacteria, including Actinomyces oris and Corynebacterium matruchotii , the conserved thiol-disulfide oxidoreductase MdbA that catalyzes oxidative folding of exported proteins is essential for bacterial viability by an unidentified mechanism. Intriguingly, in Corynebacterium diphtheriae , the deletion of mdbA blocks cell growth only at 37 °C but not at 30 °C, suggesting the presence of alternative oxidoreductase enzyme(s). By isolating spontaneous thermotolerant revertants of the mdbA mutant at 37 °C, we obtained genetic suppressors, all mapped to a single T-to-G mutation within the promoter region of tsdA , causing its elevated expression. Strikingly, increased expression of tsdA -via suppressor mutations or a constitutive promoter-rescues the pilus assembly and toxin production defects of this mutant, hence compensating for the loss of mdbA . Structural, genetic, and biochemical analyses demonstrated TsdA is a membrane-tethered thiol-disulfide oxidoreductase with a conserved CxxC motif that can substitute for MdbA in mediating oxidative folding of pilin and toxin substrates. Together with our observation that tsdA expression is upregulated at nonpermissive temperature (40 °C) in wild-type cells, we posit that TsdA has evolved as a compensatory thiol-disulfide oxidoreductase that safeguards oxidative protein folding in C. diphtheriae against thermal stress.
Keyphrases