Selective substrate uptake controls initiation of macromolecular secretion by type IV secretion systems in gram-negative bacteria. Type IV coupling proteins (T4CPs) are essential, but the molecular mechanisms governing substrate entry to the translocation pathway remain obscure. We report a biochemical approach to reconstitute a regulatory interface between the plasmid R1 T4CP and the nucleoprotein relaxosome dedicated to the initiation stage of plasmid DNA processing and substrate presentation. The predicted cytosolic domain of T4CP TraD was purified in a predominantly monomeric form, and potential regulatory effects of this protein on catalytic activities exhibited by the relaxosome during transfer initiation were analyzed in vitro. Type IV secretion systems (T4SS) in gram-negative bacteria mediate translocation of macromolecules out of the bacterial cell (14). The transmission of effector proteins and DNA into plant cells or other bacteria via cell-cell contact is one example of their function, and conjugation systems as well as the transferred DNA (T-DNA) delivery system of the phytopathogen Agrobacterium tumefaciens are prototypical of the T4SS family. Macromolecular translocation is achieved by a membranespanning protein machinery comprised of 12 gene products, VirB1 to VirB11 and an associated factor known as the coupling protein (VirD4) (66). The T4SS-associated coupling protein (T4CP) performs a crucial function in recognition of appropriate secretion substrates and governing entry of those molecules to the translocation pathway (7,8,10,30,41). In conjugation systems substrate recognition is applied to the relaxosome, a nucleoprotein complex of DNA transfer initiator proteins assembled specifically at the plasmid origin of transfer (oriT). In current models, initiation of the reactions that provide the single strand of plasmid (T-strand) DNA for secretion to recipient bacteria is expected to resemble the initiation of chromosomal replication (for reviews, see references 18, 54, and 81). Controlled opening of the DNA duplex is required to permit entry of the DNA processing machinery. The task of remodeling the conjugative oriT is generally ascribed to two or three relaxosome auxiliary factors, of host and plasmid origin, which occupy specific DNA binding sites at this locus. Intrinsic to the relaxosome is also a site-and strand-specific DNA transesterase activity that breaks the phosphodiester backbone at nic (5). Upon cleavage, the transesterase enzyme (also called relaxase) forms a reversible phosphotyrosyl linkage to the 5Ј end of the DNA. Duplex unwinding initiating from this site produces the single-stranded T strand to be exported. A wealth of information is available supporting the importance of DNA sequence recognition and binding by relaxosome components at oriT to the transesterase reaction in vitro and for effective conjugative transfer (for reviews, see references 18, 54, and 81). On the other hand, the mechanisms controlling release of the 3Ј-OH generated at nic and the subsequent DNA unwind...
Controlled duplex DNA unwinding is a crucial prerequisite for the expression and maintenance of genomes. Genomemanipulating and -regulating proteins are central to that biological function in recognizing appropriate DNA targets at initiation sequences and unwinding the complementary strands to provide single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) templates for nucleic acid synthesis and other processing reactions. The protein machineries involved include nucleic acid helicases. DNA helicases are powerful enzymes that convert the energy of nucleoside triphosphate hydrolysis to directional DNA strand translocation and separation of the double helix into its constituent single strands (for reviews, see references 13, 14, 16, 38, 55, and 64). By necessity, these enzymes interact with DNA strands via mechanisms independent of sequence recognition. At replication initiation helicases gain controlled access to the doublestranded genome at positions determined by the DNA binding properties of initiator proteins that comprise an origin recognition complex (1,9,17,31,45,66). The mechanisms supporting localized unwinding within the complex include initiatorinduced DNA looping, wrapping, and bending and feature regions of low thermodynamic stability. The exposed ssDNA mediates helicase binding followed by directional translocation along that strand until the enzyme engages the duplex for unwinding.In the MOB F family of conjugation systems, the plasmid DNA strand destined for transfer (T strand) is unwound from its complement by a dedicated conjugative helicase, TraI of F-like plasmids or TrwC of the IncW paradigm. These enzymes are remarkable in that the same polypeptides additionally harbor in a distinct domain a DNA transesterase activity. That function is required to recognize and cleave the precise phosphodiester bond, nic, in the T strand where unwinding of the secretion substrate begins. In current models the conjugative helicases are thus targeted to the transfer origin (oriT) of their cognate plasmid by the high-affinity DNA sequence interactions of their N-terminal DNA transesterase domains. In the bacterial cell, recruitment and activation of the conjugative helicase occur not on naked DNA but within an initiator complex called the relaxosome (67). For the F-like plasmid R1, sequence-specific DNA binding properties of the plasmid proteins TraI, TraY, TraM, and the host integration factor (IHF) direct assembly of the relaxosome at oriT (10,12,29,33,51,52). Integration of protein TraM confers recognition features to the relaxosome, which permit its selective docking to TraD, the coupling protein associated with the conjugative type IV secretion system (T4CP) (2,15,49). In current models, the T4CP forms a hexameric translocation pore at the cytoplasmic membrane that not only governs substrate entry to the envelope spanning type IV secretion machinery but also provides energy for macromolecular transport via ATP hydrolysis (36,50). These models propose that T4CPs provide not only a physical bridge between the plasmid and the type IV ...
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.