Endogenous Protein S-Nitrosylation in E. coli: Regulation by OxyR

D Seth, A Hausladen, YJ Wang, JS Stamler - Science, 2012 - science.org
Science, 2012science.org
Endogenous S-nitrosylation of proteins, a principal mechanism of cellular signaling in
eukaryotes, has not been observed in microbes. We report that protein S-nitrosylation is an
obligate concomitant of anaerobic respiration on nitrate in Escherichia coli. Endogenous S-
nitrosylation during anaerobic respiration is controlled by the transcription factor OxyR,
previously thought to operate only under aerobic conditions. Deletion of OxyR resulted in
large increases in protein S-nitrosylation, and S-nitrosylation of OxyR induced transcription …
Endogenous S-nitrosylation of proteins, a principal mechanism of cellular signaling in eukaryotes, has not been observed in microbes. We report that protein S-nitrosylation is an obligate concomitant of anaerobic respiration on nitrate in Escherichia coli. Endogenous S-nitrosylation during anaerobic respiration is controlled by the transcription factor OxyR, previously thought to operate only under aerobic conditions. Deletion of OxyR resulted in large increases in protein S-nitrosylation, and S-nitrosylation of OxyR induced transcription from a regulon that is distinct from the regulon induced by OxyR oxidation. Furthermore, products unique to the anaerobic regulon protected against S-nitrosothiols, and anaerobic growth of E. coli lacking OxyR was impaired on nitrate. Thus, OxyR serves as a master regulator of S-nitrosylation, and alternative posttranslational modifications of OxyR control distinct transcriptional responses.
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