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Structural determinants for activity and specificity of the bacterial toxin LlpA

Authors :
Eline K. M. Lebbe
Maarten G. K. Ghequire
René De Mot
Stijn Spaepen
Remy Loris
Abel Garcia-Pino
Structural Biology Brussels
Department of Bio-engineering Sciences
Cheung, Ambrose
Source :
P L o S Pathogens, 9 (2, 'PLoS Pathogens ', vol: 9, pages: e1003199-1-e1003199-14 (2013), PLoS Pathogens, PLoS Pathogens, Vol 9, Iss 2, p e1003199 (2013)
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Lectin-like bacteriotoxic proteins, identified in several plant-associated bacteria, are able to selectively kill closely related species, including several phytopathogens, such as Pseudomonas syringae and Xanthomonas species, but so far their mode of action remains unrevealed. The crystal structure of LlpABW, the prototype lectin-like bacteriocin from Pseudomonas putida, reveals an architecture of two monocot mannose-binding lectin (MMBL) domains and a C-terminal β-hairpin extension. The C-terminal MMBL domain (C-domain) adopts a fold very similar to MMBL domains from plant lectins and contains a binding site for mannose and oligomannosides. Mutational analysis indicates that an intact sugar-binding pocket in this domain is crucial for bactericidal activity. The N-terminal MMBL domain (N-domain) adopts the same fold but is structurally more divergent and lacks a functional mannose-binding site. Differential activity of engineered N/C-domain chimers derived from two LlpA homologues with different killing spectra, disclosed that the N-domain determines target specificity. Apparently this bacteriocin is assembled from two structurally similar domains that evolved separately towards dedicated functions in target recognition and bacteriotoxicity.<br />Author Summary In their natural environments, microorganisms compete for space and nutrients, and a major strategy to assist in niche colonization is the deployment of antagonistic compounds directed at competitors, such as secondary metabolites (antibiotics) and antibacterial peptides or proteins (bacteriocins). The latter selectively kill closely related bacteria, which is also the case for members of the LlpA family. Here, we investigate the structure-function relationship for the prototype LlpABW from a saprophytic plant-associated Pseudomonas whose genus-specific target spectrum includes several phytopathogenic pseudomonads. By determining the 3D structure of this protein, we could assign LlpA to the so-called monocot mannose-binding lectin (MMBL) family, representing its first prokaryotic member, and also add a new type of protective function, as the eukaryotic MMBL members have been linked with antiviral, antifungal, nematicidal or insecticidal activities. For the protein containing two similarly folded domains, we constructed site-specific mutants affected in carbohydrate binding and domain chimers from LlpA homologues to show that mannose-specific sugar binding mediated by one domain is required for activity and that the other domain determines target strain specificity. The strategy that evolved for these bacteriocins is reminiscent of the one used by mammalian bactericidal proteins of the RegIII family that recruited a C-type lectin fold to kill bacteria.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15537374
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
P L o S Pathogens, 9 (2, 'PLoS Pathogens ', vol: 9, pages: e1003199-1-e1003199-14 (2013), PLoS Pathogens, PLoS Pathogens, Vol 9, Iss 2, p e1003199 (2013)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b0115837e5661080bb8d99602e46ee90