A combination of unusual transcription factors binds cooperatively to control Myxococcus xanthus developmental gene expression
- aCell and Molecular Biology Program and
- bDepartment of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824
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Edited by A. Dale Kaiser, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, and approved December 19, 2008 (received for review August 28, 2008)
Abstract
Myxococcus xanthus is a bacterium that undergoes multicellular development requiring coordinate regulation of multiple signaling pathways. One pathway governs aggregation and sporulation of some cells in a starving population and requires C-signaling, whereas another pathway causes programmed cell death and requires the MazF toxin. In response to starvation, the levels of the bifunctional transcription factor/antitoxin MrpC and its related proteolytic fragment MrpC2 are increased, inhibiting the cell death pathway via direct interaction of MrpC with MazF. Herein, we demonstrate that MrpC2 plays a direct role in the transcriptional response to C-signaling. We show that MrpC2 binds to sequences upstream of the C-signal-dependent fmgA promoter. These sequences are present in other C-signal-dependent promoter regions, indicating a general role for MrpC2 in developmental gene regulation. Association of MrpC and/or MrpC2 with the fmgA promoter region in vivo requires FruA, a protein that is similar to response regulators of 2-component signal transduction systems, but may not be phosphorylated. DNA binding studies showed that this association likely involves an unusual mechanism for a response regulator in which FruA and MrpC2 bind cooperatively to adjacent sites upstream of the fmgA promoter. We propose that this unusual mechanism of combinatorial control allows coordination of morphogenetic C-signaling with starvation signaling and cell death, determining spatiotemporal gene expression and cell fate.
Footnotes
- ↵1To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: kroos{at}msu.edu
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Author contributions: S.M. and L.K. designed research, performed research, analyzed data, and wrote the paper.
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The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.
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This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/0808516106/DCSupplemental.
- Received August 28, 2008.
- © 2009 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA



