Gram-negative bacteria possess an outer membrane layer which constrains uptake and secretion of solutes and polypeptides. To overcome this barrier, bacteria have developed several systems for protein secretion. The type V secretion pathway encompasses the autotransporter proteins, the two-partner secretion system, and the recently described type Vc or AT-2 family of proteins. Since its discovery in the late 1980s, this family of secreted proteins has expanded continuously, due largely to the advent of the genomic age, to become the largest group of secreted proteins in gram-negative bacteria. Several of these proteins play essential roles in the pathogenesis of bacterial infections and have been characterized in detail, demonstrating a diverse array of function including the ability to condense host cell actin and to modulate apoptosis. However, most of the autotransporter proteins remain to be characterized. In light of new discoveries and controversies in this research field, this review considers the autotransporter secretion process in the context of the more general field of bacterial protein translocation and exoprotein function
Type IV bundle-forming pili of enteropathogenic Escherichia coli are required for the localized adherence and autoaggregation phenotypes. Whether these pili are also required for virulence was tested in volunteers by inactivating bfpA or bfpT (perA) encoding, respectively, the pilus subunit and the bfp operon transcriptional activator. Both mutants caused significantly less diarrhea. Mutation of the bfpF nucleotide-binding domain caused increased piliation, enhanced localized adherence, and abolished the twitching motility-dispersal phase of the autoaggregation phenotype. The bfpF mutant colonized the human intestine but was about 200-fold less virulent. Thus, BfpF is required for dispersal from the bacterial aggregate and for full virulence.
Two distinct protein secretion pathways, the autotransporter (AT) and the two-partner secretion (TPS) pathways are characterized by their apparent simplicity. Both are devoted to the translocation across the outer membrane of mostly large proteins or protein domains. As implied by their name, AT proteins contain their own transporter domain, covalently attached to the C-terminal extremity of the secreted passenger domain, while TPS systems are composed of two separate proteins, with TpsA being the secreted protein and TpsB its specific transporter. In both pathways, the secreted proteins are exported in a Sec-dependent manner across the inner membrane, after which they cross the outer membrane with the help of their cognate transporters. The AT translocator domains and the TpsB proteins constitute distinct families of protein-translocating, outer membrane porins of Gram-negative bacteria. Both types of transporters insert into the outer membrane as beta-barrel proteins possibly forming oligomeric pores in the case of AT and serve as conduits for their cognate secreted proteins or domains across the outer membrane. Translocation appears to be folding-sensitive in both pathways, indicating that AT passenger domains and TpsA proteins cross the periplasm and the outer membrane in non-native conformations and fold progressively at the cell surface. A major difference between AT and TPS pathways arises from the manner by which specificity is established between the secreted protein and its transporter. In AT, the covalent link between the passenger and the translocator domains ensures the translocation of the former without the need for a specific molecular recognition between the two modules. In contrast, the TPS pathway has solved the question of specific recognition between the TpsA proteins and their transporters by the addition to the TpsA proteins of an N-proximal module, the conserved TPS domain, which represents a hallmark of the TPS pathway.
b -domain. In this report, we provide genetic, biochemical and structural evidence demonstrating that a region within the BrkA passenger (Glu 601 -Ala 692 ) is necessary for folding the passenger. This region is not required for surface display in the outer membrane protease OmpT-deficient Escherichia coli strain UT5600. However, a BrkA mutant protein bearing a deletion in this region is susceptible to digestion when expressed in E. coli strains expressing OmpT suggesting that the region is required to maintain a stable structure. The instability of the deletion mutant can be rescued by surface expressing Glu 601 -Ala 692 in trans suggesting that this region is acting as an intramolecular chaperone to effect folding of the passenger concurrent with or following translocation across the outer membrane.
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is a component of the outer membrane of almost all Gram-negative bacteria and consists of lipid A, core sugars, and O-antigen. LPS is recognized by Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) and MD-2 on host innate immune cells and can signal to activate the transcription factor NFκB, leading to the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines that initiate and shape the adaptive immune response. Most of what is known about how LPS is recognized by the TLR4-MD-2 receptor complex on animal cells has been studied using Escherichia coli lipid A, which is a strong agonist of TLR4 signaling. Recent work from several groups, including our own, has shown that several important pathogenic bacteria can modify their LPS or lipid A molecules in ways that significantly alter TLR4 signaling to NFκB. Thus, it has been hypothesized that expression of lipid A variants is one mechanism by which pathogens modulate or evade the host immune response. Additionally, several key differences in the amino acid sequences of human and mouse TLR4-MD-2 receptors have been shown to alter the ability to recognize these variations in lipid A, suggesting a host-specific effect on the immune response to these pathogens. In this review, we provide an overview of lipid A variants from several human pathogens, how the basic structure of lipid A is recognized by mouse and human TLR4-MD-2 receptor complexes, as well as how alteration of this pattern affects its recognition by TLR4 and impacts the downstream immune response.
Gonococcal pili are surface appendages composed of identical polypeptide subunits termed pilin, which polymerize to form linear structures ~6 nm in diameter and 1,000-4,000 nm in length (1, 2). Pili bind epithelial cell receptor molecules and thereby promote mucosal colonization (3-5). They also interact with polymorphonuclear leukocytes and probably confer resistance to phagocytosis (6). Although pili from separate gonococcal strains and variants of the same strain exhibit similar functional and structural attributes (7), they may differ physically, chemically (8, 9), and antigenically (10-12). In order to elucidate the molecular basis for epithelial adherence and antigenic diversity, Schoolnik et al. (7) prepared cyanogen bromide (CNBr) fragments of pili from different gonococcal strains. CNBr-2 was found to be immunorecessive and to encompass a highly conserved region that mediates receptor binding function. CNBr-3 was found to be immunodominant and to comprise a variable region that confers type-specific antigenicity.The complete amino acid sequence of gonococcal pilin from the transparent opacity variant (P+Tr, reference 8) 1 of strain MS 11 is reported here and provides more detailed information about the topography of the receptor binding domain and the chemical basis for polymeric structure and antigenic diversity.
We have characterized a new virulence factor in Bordetella pertussis: serum resistance. Compared with Escherichia coli HB101, wild-type B. pertussis was relatively resistant to classical-pathway, complement-dependent killing by normal human serum. However, a mutant of B. pertussis (BPM2041) which is less virulent in mice and which has Tn5 lac inserted in a previously uncharacterized bvg-regulated gene was found to be at least 10-fold more susceptible to serum killing than the wild type. We have named this locus brk, for Bordetella resistance to killing. We have cloned and sequenced the brk locus, and it encodes two divergently transcribed open reading frames (ORFs), termed BrkA and BrkB. Both ORFs are necessary for serum resistance. Within the 300 bases which separate the two ORFs and upstream of each ORF are putative sites for BvgA binding. BrkA shows 29% identity to pertactin and has two RGD motifs in addition to a conserved proteolytic processing site and an outer membrane targeting signal. Like pertactin, BrkA is involved in adherence and invasion. Despite the similarities, a pertactin mutant was found to be not as sensitive to serum killing as the BrkA or BrkB mutants. BrkB is similar to ORFs in E. coli and Mycobacterium leprae and displays domains of homology to various transporters. On the basis of its hydropathy profile, BrkB is predicted to be a cytoplasmic membrane protein. By Southern blot, brk sequences were found in Bordetella bronchiseptica and Bordetella parapertussis but not in Bordetella avium.
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