IgaA is an integral inner membrane protein that was discovered as repressor of
the RcsCDB phosphorelay system in the intracellular pathogen Salmonella enterica
serovar Typhimurium. The RcsCDB system, conserved in many members of the family
Enterobacteriaceae, regulates expression of varied processes including motility, biofilm
formation, virulence and response to envelope stress. IgaA is an essential protein to
which, in response to envelope perturbation, the outer membrane lipoprotein RcsF
has been proposed to bind in order to activate the RcsCDB phosphorelay. Envelope
stress has also been reported to be sensed by a surface exposed domain of RcsF.
These observations support a tight control of the RcsCDB system by RcsF and IgaA
via mechanisms that, however, remain unknown. Interestingly, RcsF and IgaA have
four conserved cysteine residues in loops exposed to the periplasmic space. Two
non-consecutive disulfide bonds were shown to be required for RcsF function. Here, we
report mutagenesis studies supporting the presence of one disulfide bond (C404-C425)
in the major periplasmic loop of IgaA that is essential for repression of the RcsCDB
phosphorelay. Our data therefore suggest that the redox state of the periplasm may be
critical for the control of the RcsCDB system by its two upstream regulators, RcsF and
IgaA.Work in our laboratory is supported by grants BIO2016-77639-P (AEI/FEDER, UE) and PCIN-2016-082 (to FG-dP) from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness and
European Regional Development Funds (FEDER)
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