This review summarizes current knowledge on the structure, function, assembly and biomedical applications of the superfamily of adhesive fimbrial organelles exposed on the surface of Gram-negative pathogens with the classical chaperone/usher machinery. High-resolution three-dimensional (3D) structure studies of the minifibers assembling with the FGL (having a long F1-G1 loop) and FGS (having a short F1-G1 loop) chaperones show that they exploit the same principle of donor-strand complementation for polymerization of subunits. The 3D structure of adhesive subunits bound to host-cell receptors and the final architecture of adhesive fimbrial organelles reveal two functional families of the organelles, respectively, possessing polyadhesive and monoadhesive binding. The FGL and FGS chaperone-assembled polyadhesins are encoded exclusively by the gene clusters of the γ3- and κ-monophyletic groups, respectively, while gene clusters belonging to the γ1-, γ2-, γ4-, and π-fimbrial clades exclusively encode FGS chaperone-assembled monoadhesins. Novel approaches are suggested for a rational design of antimicrobials inhibiting the organelle assembly or inhibiting their binding to host-cell receptors. Vaccines are currently under development based on the recombinant subunits of adhesins.
This review summarizes the current knowledge on the structure, function, assembly, and biomedical applications of the family of adhesive fimbrial organelles assembled on the surface of Gram-negative pathogens via the FGL chaperone/usher pathway. Recent studies revealed the unique structural and functional properties of these organelles, distinguishing them from a related family, FGS chaperone-assembled adhesive pili. The FGL chaperone-assembled organelles consist of linear polymers of one or two types of protein subunits, each possessing one or two independent adhesive sites specific to different host cell receptors. This structural organization enables these fimbrial organelles to function as polyadhesins. Fimbrial polyadhesins may ensure polyvalent fastening of bacteria to the host cells, aggregating their receptors and triggering subversive signals that allow pathogens to evade immune defense. The FGL chaperone-assembled fimbrial polyadhesins are attractive targets for vaccine and drug design.
SummaryThe F1 antigen of Yersinia pestis belongs to a class of non-pilus adhesins assembled via a classical chaperone-usher pathway. Such pathways consist of PapDlike chaperones that bind subunits and pilot them to the outer membrane usher, where they are assembled into surface structures. In a recombinant Escherichia coli model system, chaperone-subunit (Caf1M:Caf1 n ) complexes accumulate in the periplasm. Three independent methods showed that these complexes are rod-or coil-shaped linear arrays of Caf1 subunits capped at one end by a single copy of Caf1M chaperone. Deletion and point mutagenesis identified an N-terminal donor strand region of Caf1 that was essential for polymerization in vitro, in the periplasm and at the cell surface, but not for chaperone-subunit interaction. Partial protease digestion of periplasmic complexes revealed that this region becomes buried upon formation of Caf1:Caf1 contacts. These results show that, despite the capsule-like appearance of F1 antigen, the basic structure is assembled as a linear array of subunits held together by intersubunit donor strand complementation. This example shows that strikingly different architectures can be achieved by the same general principle of donor strand complementation and suggests that a similar basic polymer organization will be shared by all surface structures assembled by classical chaperone-usher pathways.
The Yersinia pestis protein Caf1M is a typical representative of a subfamily of periplasmic molecular chaperones with characteristic structural and functional features, one of which is the location of two conserved cysteine residues close to the putative binding pocket. We show that these residues form a disulphide bond, the reduction and alkylation of which significantly increases the dissociation constant of the Caf1M-Caf1 (where Caf 1 is a polypeptide subunit of the capsule) complex [from a K d of (4.77p0.50)i10 −* M for the intact protein to one of (3.68p0.68)i10 −) M for the modified protein]. The importance of the disulphide bond for the formation of functional Caf1M in i o was demonstrated using an Escherichia coli dsbA mutant carrying the Y. pestis f1 operon. In accordance with the CD and fluorescence measurements, the disulphide bond is not important for maintenance of the overall structure of the Caf1M molecule,
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