Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2-27-2026
Publication Title
Nucleic Acids Research
Volume
54
Issue
5
First page number:
1
Last page number:
10
Abstract
In bacteria, nucleoid-structuring proteins bind and constrain DNA, often leading to transcriptional silencing. In Shigella spp., the histone-like nucleoid-structuring protein H-NS silences many genes on the large virulence plasmid. Upon a shift to human body temperature, VirB, a DNA-binding protein and key transcriptional regulator of the Shigella virulence cascade, is produced. VirB counteracts H-NS-mediated transcriptional silencing and belongs to a fast-evolving clade of the ParB superfamily. Like other ParB proteins, VirB binds the ligand CTP. While CTP is essential for the anti-silencing activity of VirB, the role of CTP in the mechanism of VirB-dependent anti-silencing has yet to be determined. This work shows that VirB does not require CTP for specific engagement of its DNA recognition site, but CTP is necessary for the formation of large VirB–DNA complexes, which likely form when VirB dimers adopt a sliding clamp conformation. Furthermore, CTP-binding mutants do not trigger a loss of negative supercoils from plasmid DNA, a VirB-dependent activity proposed to destabilize H-NS–DNA complexes. Together, our findings provide novel insight into the relationship between VirB, CTP, and DNA and reveal the role of the VirB ligand, CTP, in regulating Shigella virulence.
Controlled Subject
Genetic regulation; Chromatin
Disciplines
Environmental Microbiology and Microbial Ecology | Genetics
File Format
File Size
1597 KB
Language
English
Rights
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Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
Repository Citation
Gerson, T. M.,
Karney, M. M.,
Wing, H.
(2026).
The Role of the VirB Ligand CTP in the Molecular Mechanism of Transcriptional Anti-Silencing in Shigella flexneri.
Nucleic Acids Research, 54(5),
1-10.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkag115