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A Single Amino Acid Substitution Changes the Self-Assembly Status of a Type IV Piliation Secretin

Authors :
Mohamed Chami
Anthony P. Pugsley
Nicholas N. Nickerson
Eduardo P. C. Rocha
Sophie S. Abby
Génétique Moléculaire
Institut Pasteur [Paris]-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
Génomique évolutive des Microbes / Microbial Evolutionary Genomics
Center for Cellular Imaging and NanoAnalytics
Biozentrum [Basel, Suisse]
University of Basel (Unibas)-University of Basel (Unibas)
This work was supported in part by grants ANR-05-0307-01 and ANR-09-BLAN-0291. N.N.N. was supported by a postdoctoral fellowship from the Canadian Louis Pasteur Foundation during part of this work.
ANR-09-BLAN-0291,Secretin(2009)
Institut Pasteur [Paris] (IP)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
Source :
Journal of Bacteriology, Journal of Bacteriology, American Society for Microbiology, 2012, 194 (18), pp.4951-4958. ⟨10.1128/JB.00798-12⟩, Journal of Bacteriology, 2012, 194 (18), pp.4951-4958. ⟨10.1128/JB.00798-12⟩
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
American Society for Microbiology, 2012.

Abstract

Secretins form large multimeric complexes in the outer membranes of many Gram-negative bacteria, where they function as dedicated gateways that allow proteins to access the extracellular environment. Despite their overall relatedness, different secretins use different specific and general mechanisms for their targeting, assembly, and membrane insertion. We report that all tested secretins from several type II secretion systems and from the filamentous bacteriophage f1 can spontaneously multimerize and insert into liposomes in anin vitrotranscription-translation system. Phylogenetic analyses indicate that these secretins form a group distinct from the secretins of the type IV piliation and type III secretion systems, which do not autoassemblein vitro. A mutation causing a proline-to-leucine substitution allowed PilQ secretins from two different type IV piliation systems to assemblein vitro, albeit with very low efficiency, suggesting that autoassembly is an inherent property of all secretins.

Details

ISSN :
10985530 and 00219193
Volume :
194
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Bacteriology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5616804a364dd19d14d1daac47d71708