c-di-GMP is a cellular second messenger that regulates diverse bacterial processes, including swimming, biofilm formation and virulence. However, in Stenotrophomonas maltophilia, a nosocomial pathogen that frequently infects immunodeficient or immunoincompetent patients, the regulatory function of c-di-GMP remains unclear. Here we show that BsmR is a negative regulator of biofilm development that degrades c-di-GMP through its EAL domain. Increasing BsmR expression resulted in significant increase in bacterial swimming and decrease in cell aggregation. BsmR regulates the expression of at least 349 genes. Among them, 34 involved in flagellar assembly and a flagellar-assembly-related transcription factor (fsnR) are positively regulated. Although BsmR is a response regulator of the two-component signaling system, its role in biofilm formation depends on the expression level of its respective gene (bsmR), not on the protein’s phosphorylation level. A transcription factor, BsmT, whose coding gene is located in the same tetra-cistronic operon as bsmR, was shown to directly bind to the promoter region of the operon and, through a positive regulatory loop, modulate bsmR transcription. Thus, our results revealed that the c-di-GMP signaling pathway controls biofilm formation and swimming in S. maltophilia, suggesting c-di-GMP signaling as a target in the development of novel antibacterial agents to resist this pathogen.
Gamma‐proteobacteria Xanthomonas spp. cause at least 350 different plant diseases among important agricultural crops, which result in serious yield losses. Xanthomonas spp. rely mainly on the type III secretion system (T3SS) to infect their hosts and induce a hypersensitive response in nonhosts. HrpG, the master regulator of the T3SS, plays the dominant role in bacterial virulence. In this study, we used chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by sequencing (ChIP‐seq) and tandem affinity purification (TAP) to systematically characterize the HrpG regulon and HrpG interacting proteins in vivo. We obtained 186 candidate HrpG downstream genes from the ChIP‐seq analysis, which represented the genomic‐wide regulon spectrum. A consensus HrpG‐binding motif was obtained and three T3SS genes, hpa2, hrcU, and hrpE, were confirmed to be directly transcriptionally activated by HrpG in the inducing medium. A total of 273 putative HrpG interacting proteins were identified from the TAP data and the DNA‐binding histone‐like HU protein of Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris (HUxcc) was proved to be involved in bacterial virulence by increasing the complexity and intelligence of the bacterial signalling pathways in the T3SS.
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