Handover mechanism of the growing pilus by the bacterial outer-membrane usher FimD

被引:0
|
作者
Minge Du
Zuanning Yuan
Hongjun Yu
Nadine Henderson
Samema Sarowar
Gongpu Zhao
Glenn T. Werneburg
David G. Thanassi
Huilin Li
机构
[1] Van Andel Research Institute,Structural Biology Program
[2] Stony Brook University,Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology
[3] Stony Brook University,Center for Infectious Diseases
[4] Stony Brook University,Department of Biochemistry and Cell Biology
[5] Van Andel Research Institute,David Van Andel Advanced Cryo
[6] Glickman Urological and Kidney Institute,Electron Microscopy Suite
[7] Cleveland Clinic,Department of Urology
来源
Nature | 2018年 / 562卷
关键词
Chaperone Subunit; Pilus Fiber; Subunit Polymerization; Pilus Assembly; Chaperone FimC;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Pathogenic bacteria such as Escherichia coli assemble surface structures termed pili, or fimbriae, to mediate binding to host-cell receptors1. Type 1 pili are assembled via the conserved chaperone–usher pathway2–5. The outer-membrane usher FimD recruits pilus subunits bound by the chaperone FimC via the periplasmic N-terminal domain of the usher. Subunit translocation through the β-barrel channel of the usher occurs at the two C-terminal domains (which we label CTD1 and CTD2) of this protein. How the chaperone–subunit complex bound to the N-terminal domain is handed over to the C-terminal domains, as well as the timing of subunit polymerization into the growing pilus, have previously been unclear. Here we use cryo-electron microscopy to capture a pilus assembly intermediate (FimD–FimC–FimF–FimG–FimH) in a conformation in which FimD is in the process of handing over the chaperone-bound end of the growing pilus to the C-terminal domains. In this structure, FimF has already polymerized with FimG, and the N-terminal domain of FimD swings over to bind CTD2; the N-terminal domain maintains contact with FimC–FimF, while at the same time permitting access to the C-terminal domains. FimD has an intrinsically disordered N-terminal tail that precedes the N-terminal domain. This N-terminal tail folds into a helical motif upon recruiting the FimC-subunit complex, but reorganizes into a loop to bind CTD2 during handover. Because both the N-terminal and C-terminal domains of FimD are bound to the end of the growing pilus, the structure further suggests a mechanism for stabilizing the assembly intermediate to prevent the pilus fibre diffusing away during the incorporation of thousands of subunits.
引用
收藏
页码:444 / 447
页数:3
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] RELEASE OF OUTER-MEMBRANE FRAGMENTS BY EXPONENTIALLY GROWING BRUCELLA-MELITENSIS CELLS
    GAMAZO, C
    MORIYON, I
    INFECTION AND IMMUNITY, 1987, 55 (03) : 609 - 615
  • [42] Bacterial outer membrane ushers contain distinct targeting and assembly domains for pilus biogenesis
    Thanassi, DG
    Stathopoulos, C
    Dodson, K
    Geiger, D
    Hultgren, SJ
    JOURNAL OF BACTERIOLOGY, 2002, 184 (22) : 6260 - 6269
  • [43] The molecular mechanism of Zinc acquisition by the neisserial outer-membrane transporter ZnuD
    Charles Calmettes
    Christopher Ing
    Carolyn M. Buckwalter
    Majida El Bakkouri
    Christine Chieh-Lin Lai
    Anastassia Pogoutse
    Scott D. Gray-Owen
    Régis Pomès
    Trevor F. Moraes
    Nature Communications, 6
  • [44] Assembly of bacterial adhesins across the outer membrane via the chaperone-usher pathway
    Soto, GE
    Hultgren, SJ
    TRANSPORT OF MOLECULES ACROSS MICROBIAL MEMBRANES, 1999, 58 : 124 - 137
  • [45] The molecular mechanism of Zinc acquisition by the neisserial outer-membrane transporter ZnuD
    Calmettes, Charles
    Ing, Christopher
    Buckwalter, Carolyn M.
    El Bakkouri, Majida
    Lai, Christine Chieh-Lin
    Pogoutse, Anastassia
    Gray-Owen, Scott D.
    Pomes, Regis
    Moraes, Trevor F.
    NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2015, 6
  • [46] MECHANISM OF OUTER-MEMBRANE PERMEATION OF ANTIBIOTICS IN GRAM-NEGATIVE BACTERIA
    SAWAI, T
    YAMAGUCHI, A
    HIRUMA, R
    KANEKO, M
    JOURNAL OF PHARMACOBIO-DYNAMICS, 1985, 8 (02): : S45 - S45
  • [47] Intrinsically Disordered Protein Threads Through the Bacterial Outer-Membrane Porin OmpF
    Housden, Nicholas G.
    Hopper, Jonathan T. S.
    Lukoyanova, Natalya
    Rodriguez-Larrea, David
    Wojdyla, Justyna A.
    Klein, Alexander
    Kaminska, Renata
    Bayley, Hagan
    Saibil, Helen R.
    Robinson, Carol V.
    Kleanthous, Colin
    SCIENCE, 2013, 340 (6140) : 1570 - 1574
  • [48] Mechanism of toxin enrichment in bacterial outer membrane vesicles
    Nice, Justin
    Brown, Angela
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2019, 257
  • [49] CARBOXY-TERMINAL PHENYLALANINE IS ESSENTIAL FOR THE CORRECT ASSEMBLY OF A BACTERIAL OUTER-MEMBRANE PROTEIN
    STRUYVE, M
    MOONS, M
    TOMMASSEN, J
    JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 1991, 218 (01) : 141 - 148
  • [50] Predicting and disrupting protein-protein interactions in bacterial outer-membrane and eukaryotic mitochondria
    Naveed, Hammad
    Lin, Meishan
    Liang, Jie
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2011, 242