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Priming mycobacterial ESX-secreted protein B to form a channel-like structure

Authors :
Vanesa Vinciauskaite
Nuria Sánchez-Puig
Carmen López-Iglesias
Anjusha Mathew
Giancarlo Tria
Peter J. Peters
Raimond B. G. Ravelli
Ye Gao
Axel Siroy
Abril Gijsbers
Institute of Nanoscopy (IoN)
RS: M4I - Nanoscopy
Imaging Mass Spectrometry (IMS)
RS: M4I - Imaging Mass Spectrometry (IMS)
Faculteit FHML Centraal
Microscopy CORE Lab
Source :
Current Research in Structural Biology, Vol 3, Iss, Pp 153-164 (2021), Current Research in Structural Biology, 3, 153-164. Elsevier, Current Research in Structural Biology
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

ESX-1 is a major virulence factor of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, a secretion machinery directly involved in the survival of the microorganism from the immune system defence. It disrupts the phagosome membrane of the host cell through a contact-dependent mechanism. Recently, the structure of the inner-membrane core complex of the homologous ESX-3 and ESX-5 was resolved; however, the elements involved in the secretion through the outer membrane or those acting on the host cell membrane are unknown. Protein substrates might form this missing element. Here, we describe the oligomerisation process of the ESX-1 substrate EspB, which occurs upon cleavage of its C-terminal region and is favoured by an acidic environment. Cryo-electron microscopy data shows that quaternary structure of EspB is conserved across slow growing species, but not in the fast growing M. smegmatis. EspB assembles into a channel with dimensions and characteristics suitable for the transit of ESX-1 substrates, as shown by the presence of another EspB trapped within. Our results provide insight into the structure and assembly of EspB, and suggests a possible function as a structural element of ESX-1.<br />Graphical abstract Image 1<br />Highlights • Acidic environment and removal of C-terminal end primes EspB oligomerisation. • EspB from slow-growing species oligomerise while EspB from M. smegmatis does not. • New structure of EspB from M. marinum presented. • Residues within the C-terminal region interact with hydrophobic surfaces. • Monomer inside the channel supports the idea that EspB is part of ESX-1 machinery.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2665928X
Volume :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Current Research in Structural Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c50b2082213f96616606513e2b16623b