The small protein MntS evolved from a signal peptide and acquired a novel function regulating manganese homeostasis in Escherichia coli

Zachary Wright, Mackenzie Seymour, Kalista Paszczak, Taylor Truttmann,Katherine Senn, Samuel Stilp, Nickolas Jansen, Magdalyn Gosz, Lindsay Goeden,Vivek Anantharaman,L. Aravind,Lauren S. Waters

MOLECULAR MICROBIOLOGY(2024)

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摘要
Small proteins (<50 amino acids) are emerging as ubiquitous and important regulators in organisms ranging from bacteria to humans, where they commonly bind to and regulate larger proteins during stress responses. However, fundamental aspects of small proteins, such as their molecular mechanism of action, downregulation after they are no longer needed, and their evolutionary provenance, are poorly understood. Here, we show that the MntS small protein involved in manganese (Mn) homeostasis binds and inhibits the MntP Mn transporter. Mn is crucial for bacterial survival in stressful environments but is toxic in excess. Thus, Mn transport is tightly controlled at multiple levels to maintain optimal Mn levels. The small protein MntS adds a new level of regulation for Mn transporters, beyond the known transcriptional and post-transcriptional control. We also found that MntS binds to itself in the presence of Mn, providing a possible mechanism of downregulating MntS activity to terminate its inhibition of MntP Mn export. MntS is homologous to the signal peptide of SitA, the periplasmic metal-binding subunit of a Mn importer. Remarkably, the homologous signal peptide regions can substitute for MntS, demonstrating a functional relationship between MntS and these signal peptides. Conserved gene neighborhoods support that MntS evolved from the signal peptide of an ancestral SitA protein, acquiring a life of its own with a distinct function in Mn homeostasis.
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关键词
manganese,Mn exporter,Mn homeostasis,MntP,MntS,signal peptide,small proteins
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