Evolutionary diversification of the RomR protein of the invasive deltaproteobacterium, Bdellovibrio bacteriovorus.
Rebecca C LowryDavid S MilnerAsmaa M S Al-BayatiCarey LambertVanessa I FrancisSteven L PorterR Elizabeth SockettPublished in: Scientific reports (2019)
Bdellovibrio bacteriovorus is a predatory deltaproteobacterium that encounters individual Gram-negative prey bacteria with gliding or swimming motility, and then is able to invade such prey cells via type IVa pilus-dependent mechanisms. Movement control (pili or gliding) in other deltaproteobacteria, such as the pack hunting Myxococcus xanthus, uses a response regulator protein, RomRMx (which dynamically relocalises between the cell poles) and a GTPase, MglAMx, previously postulated as an interface between the FrzMx chemosensory system and gliding or pilus-motility apparatus, to produce regulated bidirectional motility. In contrast, B. bacteriovorus predation is a more singular encounter between a lone predator and prey; contact is always via the piliated, non-flagellar pole of the predator, involving MglABd, but no Frz system. In this new study, tracking fluorescent RomRBd microscopically during predatory growth shows that it does not dynamically relocalise, in contrast to the M. xanthus protein; instead having possible roles in growth events. Furthermore, transcriptional start analysis, site-directed mutagenesis and bacterial two-hybrid interaction studies, indicate an evolutionary loss of RomRBd activation (via receiver domain phosphorylation) in this lone hunting bacterium, demonstrating divergence from its bipolar role in motility in pack-hunting M. xanthus and further evolution that may differentiate lone from pack predators.
Keyphrases
- biofilm formation
- gram negative
- transcription factor
- multidrug resistant
- magnetic resonance
- protein protein
- binding protein
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- single cell
- genome wide
- amino acid
- escherichia coli
- bipolar disorder
- magnetic resonance imaging
- oxidative stress
- living cells
- contrast enhanced
- cell therapy
- dna methylation
- candida albicans
- data analysis
- fluorescent probe