Expanding the genetic toolkit helps dissect a global stress response in the early-branching species Fusobacterium nucleatum

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2022 Oct 4;119(40):e2201460119. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2201460119. Epub 2022 Sep 26.

Abstract

Fusobacterium nucleatum, long known as a common oral microbe, has recently garnered attention for its ability to colonize tissues and tumors elsewhere in the human body. Clinical and epidemiological research has now firmly established F. nucleatum as an oncomicrobe associated with several major cancer types. However, with the current research focus on host associations, little is known about gene regulation in F. nucleatum itself, including global stress-response pathways that typically ensure the survival of bacteria outside their primary niche. This is due to the phylogenetic distance of Fusobacteriota to most model bacteria, their limited genetic tractability, and paucity of known gene functions. Here, we characterize a global transcriptional stress-response network governed by the extracytoplasmic function sigma factor, σE. To this aim, we developed several genetic tools for this anaerobic bacterium, including four different fluorescent marker proteins, inducible gene expression, scarless gene deletion, and transcriptional and translational reporter systems. Using these tools, we identified a σE response partly reminiscent of phylogenetically distant Proteobacteria but induced by exposure to oxygen. Although F. nucleatum lacks canonical RNA chaperones, such as Hfq, we uncovered conservation of the noncoding arm of the σE response in form of the noncoding RNA FoxI. This regulatory small RNA acts as an mRNA repressor of several membrane proteins, thereby supporting the function of σE. In addition to the characterization of a global stress response in F. nucleatum, the genetic tools developed here will enable further discoveries and dissection of regulatory networks in this early-branching bacterium.

Keywords: Fusobacterium; extracytoplasmic sigma factor; noncoding RNA; posttranscriptional control; small RNA.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Fusobacterium nucleatum* / classification
  • Fusobacterium nucleatum* / genetics
  • Fusobacterium nucleatum* / physiology
  • Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial*
  • Genes, Reporter
  • Host Factor 1 Protein / genetics
  • Luminescent Proteins / genetics
  • Membrane Proteins / genetics
  • Oxygen
  • Phylogeny
  • RNA, Messenger / genetics
  • RNA, Ribosomal, 16S / genetics
  • Sequence Analysis, DNA
  • Sigma Factor* / genetics
  • Sigma Factor* / physiology
  • Stress, Physiological* / genetics

Substances

  • Host Factor 1 Protein
  • Luminescent Proteins
  • Membrane Proteins
  • RNA, Messenger
  • RNA, Ribosomal, 16S
  • Sigma Factor
  • sporulation-specific sigma factors
  • Oxygen