A light-induced microprotein triggers regulated intramembrane proteolysis to promote photo sensing in a pathogenic bacterium.
A light-induced microprotein triggers regulated intramembrane proteolysis to promote photo sensing in a pathogenic bacterium.
Manias, D.; Winkelman, J. D.; Chen, G.; Mukherjee, S.
AbstractLight, a ubiquitous environmental stimulus, shapes behavior and physiology across all domains of life. While photoreceptors are widespread in bacterial genomes, their functional roles and signal transduction mechanisms in non-photosynthetic bacteria remain understudied. Light represses biofilms and virulence factors through a bacteriophytochrome photoreceptor BphP and response regulator AlgB in the human pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Here, we used transposon mutagenesis screening to identify a conserved hypothetical microprotein, DimA, as the master activator of the photo-sensing cascade. Transcriptomics, luciferase reporter assays and physiological assays revealed that deletion of dimA abolishes light-dependent suppression of virulence factors and biofilms. Mechanistically, we demonstrated that DimA activates the site-I protease AlgW, triggering regulated intramembrane proteolysis of the anti-sigma factor MucA, liberating sigma factor AlgU ({sigma}22), which promotes algB expression. We discovered a positive feedback loop where light-activated AlgB upregulates dimA expression, thereby amplifying the photosensory response. This work establishes DimA as a crucial activator of photo sensing and expands our understanding of bacterial adaptation to changing light environments.