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Authors :
Lei, Song
Yongchao, Xie
Chuang, Li
Lidong, Wang
Chunlin, He
Yong, Zhang
Jingya, Yuan
Jingjing, Luo
Xi, Liu
Yu, Xiu
Hang, Li
Marina, Gritsenko
Ernesto S, Nakayasu
Yue, Feng
Zhao-Qing, Luo
Source :
mBio
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Legionella pneumophila promotes its survival and replication in phagocytes by actively modulating cellular processes using effectors injected into host cells by its Dot/Icm type IV secretion system. Many of these effectors function to manipulate the ubiquitin network of infected cells, thus contributing to the biogenesis of the Legionella-containing vacuole (LCV), which is permissive for bacterial replication. Among these, members of the SidE effector family (SidEs) catalyze ubiquitination of functionally diverse host proteins by a mechanism that is chemically distinct from the canonical three-enzyme cascade. The activity of SidEs is regulated by two mechanisms: reversal of the phosphoribosyl ubiquitination by DupA and DupB and direct inactivation by SidJ, which is a calmodulin-dependent glutamylase. In many L. pneumophila strains, SidJ belongs to a two-member protein family. Its homolog SdjA appears to function differently from SidJ despite the high-level similarity in their primary sequences. Here, we found that SdjA is a bifunctional enzyme that exhibits distinct activities toward members of the SidE family. It inhibits the activity of SdeB and SdeC by glutamylation. Unexpectedly, it also functions as a deglutamylase that reverses SidJ-induced glutamylation on SdeA. Our results reveal that an enzyme can catalyze two completely opposite biochemical reactions, which highlights the distinct regulation of phosphoribosyl ubiquitination by the SidJ effector family.

Details

ISSN :
21507511
Volume :
12
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
mBio
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........ad20efaed2f803326a581b2be0d984fe