Login / Signup

The impact of the cyanobacterial carbon-regulator protein SbtB and of the second messengers cAMP and c-di-AMP on CO 2 -dependent gene expression.

Oliver MantovaniViktoria ReimannMichael HaffnerFelix Philipp HerrmannKhaled A SelimKarl ForchhammerWolfgang R HessMartin Hagemann
Published in: The New phytologist (2022)
The amount of inorganic carbon (C i ) fluctuates in aquatic environments. Cyanobacteria evolved a C i -concentrating mechanism (CCM) that is regulated at different levels. The regulator SbtB binds to the second messengers cAMP or c-di-AMP and is involved in acclimation to low C i (LC) in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. Here, we investigated the role of SbtB and of associated second messengers at different C i conditions. The transcriptome of wild-type (WT) Synechocystis and the ΔsbtB mutant were compared with Δcya1, a mutant defective in cAMP production, and ΔdacA, a mutant defective in generating c-di-AMP. A defined subset of LC-regulated genes in the WT was already changed in ΔsbtB under high C i (HC) conditions. This response of ΔsbtB correlated with a diminished induction of many CCM-associated genes after LC shift in this mutant. The Δcya1 mutant showed less deviation from WT, whereas ΔdacA induced CCM-associated genes under HC. Metabolome analysis also revealed differences between the strains, whereby ΔsbtB showed slower accumulation of 2-phosphoglycolate and ΔdacA differences among amino acids compared to WT. Collectively, these results indicate that SbtB regulates a subset of LC acclimation genes while c-di-AMP and especially cAMP appear to have a lesser impact on gene expression under different C i availabilities.
Keyphrases