Next Article 
Journal of Bacteriology, September 2001, p. 4941-4949, Vol. 183, No. 17
0021-9193/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.183.17.4941-4949.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
MINIREVIEW
Keeping Signals Straight in Phosphorelay
Signal Transduction
James A.
Hoch* and
K. I.
Varughese
Division of Cellular Biology, Department of
Molecular and Experimental Medicine, The Scripps Research
Institute, La Jolla, California 92037
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INTRODUCTION |
Bacteria are highly adaptable
organisms capable of growth on countless carbon and nitrogen sources
and of occupying an inexhaustible variety of ecological niches. Any
particular bacterium possesses a subset of these capabilities that are
encoded by a repertoire of genes normally kept unexpressed unless
called upon. The key to adaptability in bacteria is their capacity to
express only those genes for enzymes and pathways that they need for
maximal growth in the environment in which they find themselves. This is achieved by their ability to recognize the composition of their environment by sensing signals emanating from it.
One of the major mechanisms of signal recognition leading to specific
gene expression is the two-component system and its more-complex
variant, the phosphorelay (Fig. 1).
Two-component systems consist of a signal recognition sensor kinase
that autophosphorylates on a histidine, usually in response to the
presence of a signal, and a response regulator transcription factor
that activates or represses gene expression when phosphorylated by the
sensor kinase to which it is mated. Thus, sensor kinases and response
regulators come in pairs; the sensor kinase detects signals and the
response regulator carries out the action that the presence of the
signal engenders.

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FIG. 1.
Domain structure of two-component systems. Sensor
kinases generally consist of a signal input domain coupled to an
autokinase domain which can be divided into a histidine
phosphotransferase subdomain (PT) and an ATP-binding subdomain.
Detection of the stimulus by the sensor kinase induces the hydrolysis
of ATP and phosphorylation of the histidine. Response regulators have a
regulatory domain (R) that controls the activity of the output domain.
Transfer of the phosphoryl group from the histidine of the sensor
kinase to the aspartate of the regulatory domain reverses its activity
on the output domain.
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Two-component systems have the ability to transfer information from one
cellular location to another. The sensor kinases are mainly integral
membrane proteins, perhaps because most are responsive to external
signals and the genes that need to be activated are somewhere else that
only the cytoplasmic response regulator can access. This information
transfer from one location to another requires specific recognition
between the interacting components, and it is recognition that
represents the potential Achilles heel in the signaling system.
Erroneous recognition between an activated sensor kinase and
inappropriate response regulators would lead to regulation of the wrong genes.
That signal propagation in two-component pathways requires precise
interaction between phosphoryl donors and acceptors to ensure the
correct response does not require profound insight. However, it is not
a trivial matter either. Bacteria such as Escherichia coli,
Bacillus subtilis, and Synchocystis species with
sizeable genomes and, therefore, a large repertoire of genes for
adaptability possess 30 to 40 different pairs of two-component systems,
each dedicated to unique signals and genes (4, 7, 8). Even more amazing is Nostoc punctiformis with 145 sensor kinases
and 103 response regulators identified in a partially sequenced genome (www.jgi.doe.gov). Progenitors of these bacteria adopted the
two-component system as a useful and precise system of regulation and
expanded it by gene duplication and mutation to serve a wide variety of purposes from gene regulation to chemotaxis. Bioinformatic studies comparing the sensor kinases and response regulators clearly show the
presence of two major and several minor families of two-component systems within each bacterium that retain high amino acid identity and
similarity within the family (4, 7). Yet these highly similar systems must process different signals, interact only with
their partner, and activate unique genes. The question arises, how is
fidelity achieved in such signal transduction systems? How do newly
duplicated two-component systems evolve specificity?
 |
DOMAIN COMPOSITION OF TWO-COMPONENT AND PHOSPHORELAY PROTEINS |
Sensor kinases are generally divisible into two domains;
an N-terminal stimulus detection domain followed by an autokinase domain consisting of a histidine-containing phosphotransferase subdomain and an ATP-binding subdomain (Fig. 1). Stimulus detection domains are heterogeneous in size and amino acid sequence, reflecting the variety of stimuli detected. In contrast, the autokinase domains with which the response regulator must interact are of similar length
and show many conserved amino acid motifs indicative of a common
evolutionary origin. Thus, in integral membrane sensor kinases, which
constitute the majority of sensor kinases, the cytoplasmic response
regulator must find its partner among highly similar autokinase domains
protruding internally from the cytoplasmic membrane.
Response regulator transcription factors consist of two domains; the
N-terminal regulator domain accepts phosphoryl groups and regulates the
activity of the C-terminal DNA-binding domain. The regulatory domain
consists of about 120 amino acids and folds into a structure common to
all domains of this type. The DNA-binding domains that determine the
promoter specificity of the transcription factor are more heterogeneous
in sequence and structure. While the vast majority of response
regulators are transcription factors, it is important to point out that
some response regulators do not have a C-terminal domain and others
have an enzyme as the C-terminal domain. Examples of both may be found
in chemotaxis signaling pathways (10).
More-complex types of two-component-based systems, termed
phosphorelays, are used in bacteria for pathways responding to multiple signal inputs (3). All eukaryotic two-component-based
systems are phosphorelays (11). In these systems, the
first regulatory domain phosphorylated by the sensor kinase relays its
phosphoryl group to a second phosphotransferase domain that serves as
the primary phosphoryl donor to the response regulator or transcription factor (Fig. 2). The first three
components may be on separate proteins as in the B. subtilis
phosphorelay or combined in a multidomain protein, as in the BvgS
sensor kinase of Bordetella pertussis (14, 15).
All eukaryotic sensor kinases are multidomain, with the sensor kinase
and its target regulatory domain on a contiguous polypeptide. The
structure of the second phosphotransferase of the B. subtilis phosphorelay Spo0B (16) differs from those
of other phosphorelays where an HpT (His-containing phosphotransfer) domain is used. Spo0B and Hpt-type domains are both four-helix bundles
on which the active-site histidine is located but differ in the
construction of the bundle. Regardless of the domain arrangement, the
mechanism of recognition and phosphoryl transfer is most likely conserved. Signal propagation relies on phosphoryl transfer, which requires precise recognition between the highly conserved regions of
these proteins, the autokinase domain and the response regulator. In
order to understand protein recognition and the mechanism of phosphoryl
transfer, it is necessary to understand how these conserved regions of
the two proteins fit together.

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FIG. 2.
Signal pathway in the sporulation phosphorelay.
Phosphorelays have an additional regulatory domain (Spo0F) and
phosphotransfer domain (Spo0B) in the signal transduction pathway that
directs phosphoryl transfer in a His-Asp-His-Asp sequence. In the
sporulation phosphorelay, these domains occur on separate proteins, but
in other phosphorelays, one or more domains may be attached to the
sensor kinase as a polydomain protein.
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STRUCTURES OF THE INTERACTING DOMAINS |
The regulatory domains of response regulators have an
-
structure with five
-helices arranged around a central
-sheet comprised of five parallel
-strands (9). The
active-site aspartate is located at one end of the molecule surrounded
by the loops connecting the
-strands to the
-helices (Fig.
3). Invariant amino acids in the active
site include the phosphorylatable aspartate located at the end of
-strand 3, two acidic residues, usually aspartates, from loop 1, a
lysine from loop 5, and a threonine from loop 4. These invariant
residues are involved in conserved biochemical functions occurring at
the active site, such as divalent metal binding, stabilization of the
phosphorylated state, and catalysis. The aspartate that accepts the
phosphoryl group is somewhat buried by the side chains of the loop
residues. It is this surface of the regulatory domain around the
phosphorylated aspartate that must make precise interaction with the
histidine-containing phosphotransferase region of the autokinase domain
to effect phosphotransfer.

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FIG. 3.
Schematic -carbon structure of Spo0F. Side chains of
the five conserved active-site residues, D10, D11, D54, T82, and K104,
are shown. Loops connecting the -strands and -helices as well as
1-helix are shown in green. Side chains from these residues are
involved in binding histidine-containing phosphotransfer domains.
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Less is known about the structure and surfaces of the sensor kinase
with which the response regulator must interact. However, structural
studies of isolated domains revealed that the active-site histidine
resides on a four-helix bundle which serves as a dimerization surface
for sensor kinases and for phosphotransferases such as Spo0B (Fig.
4) (2, 12, 16). Thus, both
Spo0B and the sensor kinases have two histidines and two active sites
generated when the two protomers dimerize. In contrast, a single active
site is found in a similar four-helix bundle generated from a single polypeptide chain that makes up the active site around the histidine in
the chemotaxis sensor kinase CheA (18) and in the Hpt
proteins that serve as phosphotransferases in some phosphorelays
(5).

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FIG. 4.
Structure of the Spo0B dimer. The four-helix bundle on
which the active-site histidine resides is formed by the dimerization
of two protomers of Spo0B.
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How phosphotransfer domains and regulatory domains fit together was
revealed by generation of a cocrystal between the Spo0F response
regulator and the Spo0B phosphotransferase (17). Since the
four-helix bundle of the Spo0B dimer has two active sites, the
cocrystal contained two Spo0F molecules per Spo0B dimer (Fig. 5). Each Spo0F molecule was arranged such
that the
1-helix of Spo0F was associated with the
1-helix of one
protomer of the four-helix bundle (Fig.
6). This interaction between the two
helices aligns the histidine of Spo0B with the aspartate of Spo0F in
precisely the correct configuration and distance for phosphotransfer.
Spo0F also contacts the four-helix bundle of Spo0B via the residues in
loop 4 interacting with the
2-helix of the second protomer (Fig. 6).
In view of the close similarity of the four-helix bundles of Spo0B and
sensor kinases, the Spo0F-Spo0B structure should be a paradigm for
response regulator-sensor kinase interaction. By comparing the residues
known to be involved in the surface of interaction of these two
proteins in related bacterial species or in evolutionarily close
relatives of the proteins in the same organism, it should be possible
to determine how interaction surfaces evolve and gain molecular
specificity.

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FIG. 5.
Orientation of binding by Spo0F and Spo0B as revealed in
a cocrystal. The protomers of Spo0B (green and blue) are viewed 90°
from the orientation of Spo0B in Fig. 4. The two Spo0F molecules
(magenta) are oriented so that their active-site aspartate (D54) is
juxtaposed to the histidine (H30) of Spo0B.
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FIG. 6.
Orientation of amino acid side chains involved in
Spo0F-Spo0B interaction. The four-helix bundle of Spo0B is shown in
green, and the SpoOF regions are shown in red. The Spo0B residues
arising from helices of the second protein are marked with a prime.
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INTERACTION SURFACE RESIDUES RESIST EVOLUTIONARY CHANGE |
Crystallographic and alanine-scanning studies revealed that those
residues of Spo0F making up the loops connecting the
-strands and
-helices surrounding the phosphorylatable aspartate are responsible for interaction with Spo0B and sensor kinase A, the sensor kinase for
Spo0F (13, 17). Examination of the evolution of these residues in comparison to the remainder of residues making up Spo0F in
the related Bacillus halodurans and Bacillus
anthracis species revealed that 20 of 21 (95%) of interaction
residues were identical, whereas 50% of the remaining residues were
identical in all three organisms (Fig.
7). Thus, residues making up a surface of
interaction are resistant to further evolutionary change in true
orthologous response regulators, and this conservation may be a general
feature of protein-protein interaction.

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FIG. 7.
Comparison of Spo0F residues in three
Bacillus species. Sequences from three Bacillus
species, B.subtilis (Bsu), B. anthracis (Ban), and
B. halodurans (Bha), are shown. The positions of the
-strands and -helices are indicated. Asterisks indicate residues
that are identical in all three proteins, and colons indicate
functional conservation of residues. Periods indicate residues of the
same chemical class, e.g. charged, hydrophobic, etc. Residues that
interact with Spo0B (vertical lines) and those that interact with
1-helix or 2'-helix are indicated. Results from alanine-scanning
studies (13) are shown as residues affecting the rate of
reaction ( ) or equilibrium ( ) between Spo0F and Spo0B when
changed to alanine.
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WHAT THE INTERACTION SURFACE REVEALS ABOUT RECOGNITION |
When the analysis of all of the two-component systems of an
organism became feasible upon completion of genome sequences, it was
noticed that most of the response regulator transcription factors could
be placed in families on the basis of homology in the DNA-binding
domains (7). Thus, the OmpR or NarL family contains many
members with primary structure similarity in the DNA-binding domain and
this sequence conservation is explainable now that the tertiary
structure of the domain has been elucidated (1, 6). In
addition, the sensor kinase members of each family showed considerable
sequence conservation around the active-site histidine
(4), especially the region immediately C terminal to the
phosphorylated histidine that is now known to be the primary site of
interaction of the four-helix bundle with the response regulator
(17). This suggested that the catalytic autokinase domain
of the sensor kinase and both domains of the response regulator evolved
as a unit. These observations are most consistent with families arising
from expansion by gene duplication. Thus, the question arises, how does
the interaction surface of a newly duplicated two-component system
evolve away from its immediate progenitor?
The surface by which two-component proteins interact serves not only as
the means for recognition of compatible pairs of signaling proteins but
also as the catalytic site for phosphoryl transfer between them.
Therefore, it should not be surprising that the active-site residues,
including those involved in catalysis and those residues closely
associated with catalytic residues, are resistant to evolutionary
change since the environment of the active site is the primary
determinant of directionality and equilibrium in phosphoryl transfer.
Relatively minor side chain changes in these residues have profound
deleterious effects on both of these properties (13).
Because the invariant residues are responsible for catalysis,
recognition must be the province of the other residues surrounding the
active site that are part of the surface of interaction. Do these
residues evolve at random, or is there some pattern to evolution of
interaction surfaces?
In order to identify residues involved in recognition, it made sense to
examine in detail a closely related family of two-component systems
that has relatively recently evolved by gene duplication and whose
members must have acquired unique recognition properties to tell each
other apart. Furthermore, it seemed intuitive to examine the family
within a single bacterial species since it is there that recognition
discrimination is important. The OmpR family serves as a convenient
measure of the evolution of recognition specificity in sensor
kinase-response regulator pairs that multiplied by gene duplication.
This is the largest family of two-component signal transduction systems
in the bacteria whose genomes have been sequenced. In order to compare
these related response regulators from B. subtilis, the
residues making up the surface of interaction with the sensor kinase
have been superimposed on the Spo0F interaction surface revealed by the
crystal structure of the Spo0F-Spo0B complex and by alanine-scanning
mutagenesis studies.
Three groups of response regulator residues defined by their degree of
evolutionary conservation make up the interaction surface. The
aforementioned catalytic residues, including the phosphorylated aspartate D54, two additional acidic residues, D10 and D11, a threonine, T82, and a lysine, K104, are present in virtually all regulatory domains (Fig. 3). Both variable and conserved residues are
found in the amino acids making up the five loops connecting the
-strands to
-helices (L1 to L5 [Fig. 3]) involved in
interaction (Fig. 8). Those residues of
Spo0F making hydrophobic interaction with the
1- and
2'-helices
of the Spo0B phosphotransfer domain, and probably the same helices of
this domain of sensor kinase A, are very highly conserved within the
OmpR family response regulators. These residues include residues 12, 15, 18, 56, 83, 84, 104, 105, and 106; residues 12, 104, and 105 also
make hydrogen bond interactions with the
1-helix. Residue 84, which
makes contact with the
2'-helix, is highly conserved within
families. We propose that these residues play the role of anchoring the
response regulator to the
1- and
2'-helices to ensure that the
two proteins fit together in the correct orientation, bringing the
phosphorylated histidine of the sensor kinase in accurate juxtaposition
and distance to the catalytic aspartate of the response regulator.
Since these "anchor" residues interact with the
1-helix of the
sensor kinase just C terminal to the histidine, the familial
conservation of
1-helix residues previously observed is now
explainable (4).

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FIG. 8.
Conserved and variable residues at the interaction
surface of response regulators of the OmpR family. The surface is
composed of side chains from the loops (L1 to L5) and 1-helix.
Conserved residues (mustard) variable residues (green) are indicated.
The numbers indicate amino acid positions of Spo0F.
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The anchor residues may have little, if any, role in determining
specificity of interaction within the same family. However, they
undoubtedly play a role in discrimination between families. Residues in
loop 2 contact the C-terminal domain of Spo0B and may or may not be
involved in recognition with sensor kinases. The folding of the ATP
domain of sensor kinases is similar to that of the C-terminal domain of
Spo0B, but the relative orientation of the ATP-binding domains with the
four-helix bundles in sensor kinases is not known. Hence, it is
difficult to predict if the interactions seen with the C-terminal
domain of Spo0B will be preserved in sensor kinases. Among the residues
making contact with the
1- and
2'-helices are those with high
variability from response regulator to response regulator that are the
likely determinants of recognition specificity. These "recognition"
residues may include residues 14, 21, 85, 87, 107, and 108. There
appears to be a random assortment of residue types at these positions,
and they differ in charge, size, and hydrophobicity, or hydrophilicity.
We propose it is the combination of these residues across the
interaction surface that erects a barrier to productive interaction of
the anchor residues with nonpartner sensor kinases.
The surfaces of these two interacting proteins are best described as
mosaics with a fixed pattern of anchor and recognition residues (Fig.
9). Anchor residues determine how the two
proteins will fit together, and recognition residues either allow the
fit or prevent the two proteins from fitting together by introducing charge and size constraints at several points within the surface. The
greater the incompatibilities in recognition residues between the wrong
partners of two-component systems, the less chance that signals will go
astray. A similar pattern of anchor and recognition residues may be
found in all the families of two-component systems.

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FIG. 9.
Residues on the interaction surface of OmpR family
response regulators. Catalytic residues are colored red. Conserved
(anchor) residues are colored blue, and variable (recognition) residues
are colored green. The positions of the 1- and 2'-helices of
Spo0B are indicated by the magenta C trace. The residues and numbers
are those of Spo0F.
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CONCLUSIONS |
The surface of interaction of a response regulator with the
phosphoryl donor surface of the phosphotransfer domain of a sensor kinase is a mosaic of amino acid residues arranged in a pattern. The
mosaic pattern is very similar in all members of a related family of
response regulators. Three types of residues make up the pattern:
essentially invariant catalytic residues, anchor residues, and
recognition residues. Anchor residues make the interactions required to
bind the proteins together in the correct orientation for catalysis.
They are highly similar in all members of the family. Recognition
residues also make contact with the sensor kinase surface but are
extremely variable in individual members of the same family. By virtue
of differences in size, charge, and hydrophobicity or hydrophilicity,
recognition residues prevent heterologous interaction between nonmated
pairs of sensor kinases and response regulators, ensuring fidelity in
signal propagation.
Residues making up the surface of interaction between sensor kinases
and response regulators do not change in true orthologues in related
bacterial species. It would not be surprising if this conservation were
true for all associating proteins and domains within a protein that are
required to make productive interaction.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
This research was supported, in part, by grants GM19416 and
GM54246 from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, National Institutes of Health, USPHS.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Molecular and Experimental Medicine, MEM-116, The Scripps Research
Institute, 10550 North Torrey Pines Rd., La Jolla, CA 92037. Phone:
(858) 784-7905. Fax: (858) 784-7966. E-mail: hoch{at}scripps.edu.
Publication 14136-MEM from The Scripps Research Institute.
 |
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Journal of Bacteriology, September 2001, p. 4941-4949, Vol. 183, No. 17
0021-9193/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.183.17.4941-4949.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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