Ubiquitous purine sensor modulates diverse signal transduction pathways in bacteria.
Elizabet Monteagudo-CascalesVadim M GumerovMatilde FernándezMiguel A MatillaJosé Antonio GaviraIgor B ZhulinTino KrellPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Purines and their derivatives control intracellular energy homeostasis and nucleotide synthesis, and act as signaling molecules. Here, we combine structural and sequence information to define a purine-binding motif that is present in sensor domains of thousands of bacterial receptors that modulate motility, gene expression, metabolism, and second-messenger turnover. Microcalorimetric titrations of selected sensor domains validate their ability to specifically bind purine derivatives, and evolutionary analyses indicate that purine sensors share a common ancestor with amino-acid receptors. Furthermore, we provide experimental evidence of physiological relevance of purine sensing in a second-messenger signaling system that modulates c-di-GMP levels.