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NosP Detection of Heme Modulates Burkholderia thailandensis Biofilm Formation.

Jiayuan FuLisa-Marie NisbettYulong GuoElizabeth M Boon
Published in: Biochemistry (2023)
Aggregated bacteria embedded within self-secreted extracellular polymeric substances, or biofilms, are resistant to antibiotics and cause chronic infections. As such, they are a significant public health threat. Heme is an abundant iron source for pathogenic bacteria during infection; many bacteria have systems to detect heme assimilated from host cells, which is correlated with the transition between acute and chronic infection states. Here, we investigate the heme-sensing function of a newly discovered multifactorial sensory hemoprotein called NosP and its role in biofilm regulation in the soil-dwelling bacterium Burkholderia thailandensis , the close surrogate of Bio-Safety-Level-3 pathogen Burkholderia pseudomallei . The NosP family protein has previously been shown to exhibit both nitric oxide (NO)- and heme-sensing functions and to regulate biofilms through NosP-associated histidine kinases and two-component systems. Our in vitro studies suggest that Bt NosP exhibits heme-binding kinetics and thermodynamics consistent with a labile heme-responsive protein and that the holo-form of Bt NosP acts as an inhibitor of its associated histidine kinase Bt NahK. Furthermore, our in vivo studies suggest that increasing the concentration of extracellular heme decreases B. thailandensis biofilm formation, and deletion of nosP and nahK abolishes this phenotype, consistent with a model that Bt NosP detects heme and exerts an inhibitory effect on Bt NahK to decrease the biofilm.
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