Energy-sensing switch discovery could have broad implications
Biochemists at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) have
discovered a genetic sequence that can alter its host gene's activity in
response to cellular energy levels. The scientists have found this particular
energy-sensing switch in bacterial genes, which could make it a target for a
powerful new class of antibiotics. If similar energy-sensing switches are also
identified for human genes, they may be useful for treating metabolism-related
disorders such as type 2 diabetes and heart disease.
"This discovery adds a new dimension to our
understanding of how cells sense and manage their energy levels, which is one
of the most important processes in biology," said the study's senior
author, Martha J. Fedor, a professor the departments of Chemical Physiology and
Molecular Biology and a member of the Skaggs Institute for Chemical Biology at
TSRI.
The findings are described online ahead of print
on October 21, 2012, in the journal Nature Chemical Biology.
A fuel sensor
This type of gene-switching sequence is known as a
riboswitch because it appears on the strand of ribonucleic acid (RNA) that is
first transcribed from a gene's DNA. Unlike other known riboswitches, which
have relatively limited functions, this one acts as a sensor for the basic
molecular fuel that powers all living cells and controls many genes.
The newly discovered riboswitch detects a small
molecule known as adenosine triphosphate (ATP), the standard unit of chemical
energy in all known organisms on our planet. Scientists had thought that cells
use only large and relatively complex proteins to sense these all-important
energy molecules and adjust cell activities accordingly. No one had found ATP
sensors among riboswitches, which can alter cell activity at a more fundamental
level—usually by interrupting a gene's transcription from DNA.
Moreover, previously described riboswitches are
relatively simple feedback sensors that affect narrow metabolic pathways. Most
of them merely sense and adjust the expression rate of their own host gene.
"This is the first riboswitch that is known to be involved in global
metabolic regulation," said Fedor.
In recent years, the Fedor team had found hints
that such a riboswitch could exist. Many RNA sequences with possible riboswitch
activity had never been characterized, and several riboswitches in bacteria
sense molecules that are closely related to ATP. Fedor and a graduate student
in her laboratory, Peter Y. Watson, therefore set out to find bacterial
riboswitches that could indeed sense ATP.
Caught in the act
The task was more challenging than it might have
seemed. Watson could not simply expose suspected riboswitches to ATP and see
which ones stuck best to the energy molecules. ATP is present in high
concentrations in cells, and its interactions with its known protein sensors
are necessarily fleeting, low-affinity affairs. Interactions with a riboswitch
would be expected to look the same. "Such interactions are really too weak
to be detected using traditional methods," Watson said. But he found
evidence that an RNA interaction with an ATP-like molecule would occur in a way
that allows the brief coupling to be caught in the act—using a burst of
ultraviolet radiation, which can create a strong chemical crosslink between two
molecules.
In this way, he discovered a stretch of apparent
ATP-binding RNA known as the ydaO motif. Watson performed structure-mapping
analyses of ydaO to confirm that it binds to ATP and to determine precisely
where it binds. Attaching ydaO to a "reporter" gene, he found that in
bacterial cells, the reporter gene's expression level stayed low when ATP
levels were normal and rose sharply when ATP levels dropped—as would be
expected if ydaO is really an ATP-sensing riboswitch. Even in unaltered cells
of a test bacterium, B. subtilis, levels of the genes that normally contain the
ydaO motif rose and fell in the same way in response to changing ATP levels.
The ydaO motif occurs in the large subset of
bacteria known as gram-positive bacteria. Across these bacterial species, it
has been found, to date, on 580 separate genes. "These ydaO-regulated
genes encode proteins that have a wide variety of functions, from cell wall
metabolism to amino acid transport," Watson said. "It makes sense
that a riboswitch in control of such disparate processes would be responding to
a central metabolite such as ATP."
New possibilities
The finding has basic scientific importance
because it is the first known example of a riboswitch that binds ATP; it is
also the first known riboswitch that has such broad regulatory functions.
"It opens up the possibility that RNA switches are involved in the general
regulation of metabolism," said Fedor.
The fact that ydaO motifs serve as
"off-switches" for key bacterial genes also makes them a potential
target for new antibiotics. "Hitting these riboswitches with a
small-molecule, ATP-mimicking drug so that they can't turn on genes that promote
bacterial growth and survival could be a viable approach," said Fedor.
Her laboratory will now search for other
ATP-sensing riboswitches in bacteria and in higher organisms, including humans.
A human ATP-sensing riboswitch, if targeted appropriately by drugs, might be
able to alter cell activity in ways that help treat common metabolic disorders.
Type 2 diabetes, which presently affects several hundred million people
worldwide, is known to feature the improper regulation of ATP levels in cells.
Funding for the study, "The ydaO motif is an
ATP-sensing riboswitch in Bacillus subtilis," was provided by the Skaggs
Institute for Chemical Biology at TSRI.