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Action of a minimal contractile bactericidal nanomachine

Authors :
Jeff F. Miller
Michel Plattner
Christopher Browning
Dean Scholl
Z. Hong Zhou
Jaycob Avaylon
Ke Ding
Nikolai S. Prokhorov
Peng Ge
S.A. Buth
Petr G. Leiman
Urmi Chakraborty
Mikhail M. Shneider
Source :
Nature, vol 580, iss 7805, Nature
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2020.

Abstract

R-type bacteriocins are minimal contractile nanomachines that hold promise as precision antibiotics1–4. Each bactericidal complex uses a collar to bridge a hollow tube with a contractile sheath loaded in a metastable state by a baseplate scaffold1,2. Fine-tuning of such nucleic acid-free protein machines for precision medicine calls for an atomic description of the entire complex and contraction mechanism, which is not available from baseplate structures of the (DNA-containing) T4 bacteriophage5. Here we report the atomic model of the complete R2 pyocin in its pre-contraction and post-contraction states, each containing 384 subunits of 11 unique atomic models of 10 gene products. Comparison of these structures suggests the following sequence of events during pyocin contraction: tail fibres trigger lateral dissociation of baseplate triplexes; the dissociation then initiates a cascade of events leading to sheath contraction; and this contraction converts chemical energy into mechanical force to drive the iron-tipped tube across the bacterial cell surface, killing the bacterium. The authors report near-atomic resolution structures of the R-type bacteriocin from Pseudomonas aeruginosa in the pre-contraction and post-contraction states, and these structures provide insight into the mechanism of action of molecular syringes.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature, vol 580, iss 7805, Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....80bfcbc66925bf324ef1ad20b8a34398