TY - JOUR
T1 - A hyperpromiscuous antitoxin protein domain for the neutralization of diverse toxin domains
AU - Kurata, Tatsuaki
AU - Saha, Chayan Kumar
AU - Buttress, Jessica A
AU - Mets, Toomas
AU - Brodiazhenko, Tetiana
AU - Turnbull, Kathryn J
AU - Awoyomi, Ololade F
AU - Oliveira, Sofia Raquel Alves
AU - Jimmy, Steffi
AU - Ernits, Karin
AU - Delannoy, Maxence
AU - Persson, Karina
AU - Tenson, Tanel
AU - Strahl, Henrik
AU - Hauryliuk, Vasili
AU - Atkinson, Gemma C
N1 - Copyright © 2022 the Author(s). Published by PNAS.
PY - 2022/2/8
Y1 - 2022/2/8
N2 - Toxin-antitoxin (TA) gene pairs are ubiquitous in microbial chromosomal genomes and plasmids as well as temperate bacteriophages. They act as regulatory switches, with the toxin limiting the growth of bacteria and archaea by compromising diverse essential cellular targets and the antitoxin counteracting the toxic effect. To uncover previously uncharted TA diversity across microbes and bacteriophages, we analyzed the conservation of genomic neighborhoods using our computational tool FlaGs (for flanking genes), which allows high-throughput detection of TA-like operons. Focusing on the widespread but poorly experimentally characterized antitoxin domain DUF4065, our in silico analyses indicated that DUF4065-containing proteins serve as broadly distributed antitoxin components in putative TA-like operons with dozens of different toxic domains with multiple different folds. Given the versatility of DUF4065, we have named the domain Panacea (and proteins containing the domain, PanA) after the Greek goddess of universal remedy. We have experimentally validated nine PanA-neutralized TA pairs. While the majority of validated PanA-neutralized toxins act as translation inhibitors or membrane disruptors, a putative nucleotide cyclase toxin from a Burkholderia prophage compromises transcription and translation as well as inducing RelA-dependent accumulation of the nucleotide alarmone (p)ppGpp. We find that Panacea-containing antitoxins form a complex with their diverse cognate toxins, characteristic of the direct neutralization mechanisms employed by Type II TA systems. Finally, through directed evolution, we have selected PanA variants that can neutralize noncognate TA toxins, thus experimentally demonstrating the evolutionary plasticity of this hyperpromiscuous antitoxin domain.
AB - Toxin-antitoxin (TA) gene pairs are ubiquitous in microbial chromosomal genomes and plasmids as well as temperate bacteriophages. They act as regulatory switches, with the toxin limiting the growth of bacteria and archaea by compromising diverse essential cellular targets and the antitoxin counteracting the toxic effect. To uncover previously uncharted TA diversity across microbes and bacteriophages, we analyzed the conservation of genomic neighborhoods using our computational tool FlaGs (for flanking genes), which allows high-throughput detection of TA-like operons. Focusing on the widespread but poorly experimentally characterized antitoxin domain DUF4065, our in silico analyses indicated that DUF4065-containing proteins serve as broadly distributed antitoxin components in putative TA-like operons with dozens of different toxic domains with multiple different folds. Given the versatility of DUF4065, we have named the domain Panacea (and proteins containing the domain, PanA) after the Greek goddess of universal remedy. We have experimentally validated nine PanA-neutralized TA pairs. While the majority of validated PanA-neutralized toxins act as translation inhibitors or membrane disruptors, a putative nucleotide cyclase toxin from a Burkholderia prophage compromises transcription and translation as well as inducing RelA-dependent accumulation of the nucleotide alarmone (p)ppGpp. We find that Panacea-containing antitoxins form a complex with their diverse cognate toxins, characteristic of the direct neutralization mechanisms employed by Type II TA systems. Finally, through directed evolution, we have selected PanA variants that can neutralize noncognate TA toxins, thus experimentally demonstrating the evolutionary plasticity of this hyperpromiscuous antitoxin domain.
KW - Antitoxins/genetics
KW - Bacterial Proteins/genetics
KW - Bacterial Toxins/genetics
KW - Burkholderia/genetics
KW - Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial/genetics
KW - Guanosine Pentaphosphate/genetics
KW - Operon/genetics
KW - Prophages/genetics
KW - Protein Domains/genetics
KW - Toxin-Antitoxin Systems/genetics
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85124146792&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1073/pnas.2102212119
DO - 10.1073/pnas.2102212119
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 35121656
SN - 0027-8424
VL - 119
JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
IS - 6
M1 - e2102212119
ER -