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Microorganisms survive stresses by alternating the expression of genes suitable for surviving the immediate and present danger and eventually adapt to new conditions. Many bacteria have evolved a multiprotein "molecular machinery" designated the "Stressosome" that integrates different stress signals and activates alternative sigma factors for appropriate downstream responses. We and others have identified orthologs of some of the Bacillus subtilis stressosome components, RsbR, RsbS, RsbT and RsbUVW in several mycobacteria and we have previously reported mutual interactions among the stressosome components RsbR, RsbS, RsbT and RsbUVW from Mycobacterium marinum. Here we provide evidence that "STAS" domains of both RsbR and RsbS are important for establishing the interaction and thus critical for stressosome assembly. Fluorescence microscopy further suggested co-localization of RsbR and RsbS in multiprotein complexes visible as co-localized fluorescent foci distributed at scattered locations in the M. marinum cytoplasm; the number, intensity and distribution of such foci changed in cells under stressed conditions. Finally, we provide bioinformatics data that 17 (of 244) mycobacteria, which lack the RsbRST genes, carry homologs of Bacillus cereus genes rsbK and rsbM indicating the existence of alternative σ activation pathways among mycobacteria.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-89069-8 | DOI Listing |
Res Sq
May 2025
Department of Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94158, USA.
Bacterial pathogens rely on their ability to sense and respond to environmental stressors to survive and maintain virulence. The stressosome, a 1.8-megadalton nanomachine, serves as a critical sensor and regulator of the general stress response.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
February 2025
Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, Oklahoma, USA.
Bacillus subtilis uses cytoplasmic complexes called stressosomes to initiate the σ-mediated general stress response to environmental stress. Each stressosome comprises two types of proteins - RsbS and four paralogous RsbR proteins - that are thought to sequester the RsbT protein until stress causes RsbT release and subsequent σ activation. RsbR proteins have been assumed to sense stress, but evidence for their sensing function has been elusive, and the identity of the true sensor has remained unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCommun Biol
June 2022
Department of Biophysics II / Structural Biology, University of Regensburg, Regensburg, 93053, Germany.
The stressosome is a pseudo-icosahedral megadalton bacterial stress-sensing protein complex consisting of several copies of two STAS-domain proteins, RsbR and RsbS, and the kinase RsbT. Upon perception of environmental stress multiple copies of RsbT are released from the surface of the stressosome. Free RsbT activates downstream proteins to elicit a global cellular response, such as the activation of the general stress response in Gram-positive bacteria.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
May 2021
Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Biomedical Centre, Uppsala University, Box 596, 751 24, Uppsala, Sweden.
Microorganisms survive stresses by alternating the expression of genes suitable for surviving the immediate and present danger and eventually adapt to new conditions. Many bacteria have evolved a multiprotein "molecular machinery" designated the "Stressosome" that integrates different stress signals and activates alternative sigma factors for appropriate downstream responses. We and others have identified orthologs of some of the Bacillus subtilis stressosome components, RsbR, RsbS, RsbT and RsbUVW in several mycobacteria and we have previously reported mutual interactions among the stressosome components RsbR, RsbS, RsbT and RsbUVW from Mycobacterium marinum.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
November 2020
Laboratory of Intracellular Bacterial Pathogens, National Centre for Biotechnology (CNB)-CSIC, Darwin 3, 28049, Madrid, Spain.
Listeria monocytogenes responds to environmental stress using a supra-macromolecular complex, the stressosome, to activate the stress sigma factor SigB. The stressosome structure, inferred from in vitro-assembled complexes, consists of the core proteins RsbR (here renamed RsbR1) and RsbS and, the kinase RsbT. The active complex is proposed to be tethered to the membrane and to support RsbR1/RsbS phosphorylation by RsbT and the subsequent release of RsbT following signal perception.
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