Scientific Reports (Apr 2025)
Allosteric coupling activation mechanism in histidine kinases
Abstract
Abstract Histidine kinases (HKs) are crucial regulators of cellular functions, mediating the phosphorylation of specific proteins to modulate their activity and localization. Upon signal detection, HKs transfer a phosphate group from ATP to a conserved histidine residue within their Dimerization and Histidine phosphotransfer domain, subsequently passing the phosphate to a response regulator (RR) that typically interacts with DNA promoters to regulate gene expression. This study investigates the signal transduction mechanism of Bacillus subtilis HK DesK. We generated substitutions on the conserved phospho-acceptor histidine and evaluated their effects on DesK’s activity in both in vivo and in vitro contexts. Notably, we found that a variant of DesK lacking the conserved histidine could still activate gene expression. Furthermore, computational simulations of DesK variants complexed with DesR revealed interactions that could be required to maintain DesR’s active conformation. Our findings elucidate an alternative pathway for RR activation via an allosteric mechanism that operates independently of histidine phosphorylation. We also demonstrated that Escherichia coli HK EnvZ, when lacking the conserved histidine, can activate gene expression. This HK-Allosteric Coupling Activation Mechanism functions without reliance on phosphorylation or ATP consumption, potentially serving as a fail-safe mechanism under nutrient-limited conditions.
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