Genome‐Wide Analysis of DtxR and HrrA Regulons Reveals Novel Targets and a High Level of Interconnectivity Between Iron and Heme Regulatory Networks in Corynebacterium glutamicum

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Iron is vital for most organisms, serving as a cofactor in enzymes, regulatory proteins, and respiratory cytochromes. In Corynebacterium glutamicum , iron and heme homeostasis are tightly interconnected and controlled by the global regulators DtxR and HrrA. While DtxR senses intracellular Fe 2+ , HrrSA is activated by heme. This study provides the first genome‐wide analysis of DtxR and HrrA binding dynamics under varying iron and heme conditions using chromatin affinity purification and sequencing (ChAP‐Seq). We revealed 25 novel DtxR targets and 210 previously unrecognized HrrA targets. Among these, metH, encoding homocysteine methyltransferase, and xerC, encoding a tyrosine recombinase, were bound by DtxR exclusively under heme conditions, underscoring condition‐dependent variation. Activation of metH by DtxR links iron metabolism to methionine synthesis, potentially relevant for the mitigation of oxidative stress. Beyond novel targets, 16 shared targets between DtxR and HrrA, some with overlapping operator sequences, highlight their interconnected regulons. Strikingly, we demonstrate the significance of weak ChAP‐Seq peaks that are often disregarded in global approaches, but feature an impact of the regulator on differential gene expression. These findings emphasize the importance of genome‐wide profiling under different conditions to uncover novel targets and shed light on the complexity and dynamic nature of bacterial regulatory networks.

Article activity feed