mSystems (Feb 2021)
Chaperone-Mediated Stress Sensing in <named-content content-type="genus-species">Mycobacterium tuberculosis</named-content> Enables Fast Activation and Sustained Response
Abstract
ABSTRACT Dynamical properties of gene regulatory networks are tuned to ensure bacterial survival. In mycobacteria, the MprAB-σE network responds to the presence of stressors, such as surfactants that cause surface stress. Positive feedback loops in this network were previously predicted to cause hysteresis, i.e., different responses to identical stressor levels for prestressed and unstressed cells. Here, we show that hysteresis does not occur in nonpathogenic Mycobacterium smegmatis but does occur in Mycobacterium tuberculosis. However, the observed rapid temporal response in M. tuberculosis is inconsistent with the model predictions. To reconcile these observations, we implement a recently proposed mechanism for stress sensing, namely, the release of MprB from the inhibitory complex with the chaperone DnaK upon the stress exposure. Using modeling and parameter fitting, we demonstrate that this mechanism can accurately describe the experimental observations. Furthermore, we predict perturbations in DnaK expression that can strongly affect dynamical properties. Experiments with these perturbations agree with model predictions, confirming the role of DnaK in fast and sustained response. IMPORTANCE Gene regulatory networks controlling stress response in mycobacterial species have been linked to persistence switches that enable bacterial dormancy within a host. However, the mechanistic basis of switching and stress sensing is not fully understood. In this paper, combining quantitative experiments and mathematical modeling, we uncover how interactions between two master regulators of stress response—the MprAB two-component system (TCS) and the alternative sigma factor σE—shape the dynamical properties of the surface stress network. The result show hysteresis (history dependence) in the response of the pathogenic bacterium M. tuberculosis to surface stress and lack of hysteresis in nonpathogenic M. smegmatis. Furthermore, to resolve the apparent contradiction between the existence of hysteresis and fast activation of the response, we utilize a recently proposed role of chaperone DnaK in stress sensing. These result leads to a novel system-level understanding of bacterial stress response dynamics.
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