| Literature DB >> 19633084 |
Lalitha Biswas1, Raja Biswas, Christiane Nerz, Knut Ohlsen, Martin Schlag, Tina Schäfer, Tobias Lamkemeyer, Anne-Kathrin Ziebandt, Klaus Hantke, Ralf Rosenstein, Friedrich Götz.
Abstract
In Staphylococcus, the twin-arginine translocation (Tat) pathway is present only in some species and is composed of TatA and TatC. The tatAC operon is associated with the fepABC operon, which encodes homologs to an iron-binding lipoprotein, an iron-dependent peroxidase (FepB), and a high-affinity iron permease. The FepB protein has a typical twin-arginine (RR) signal peptide. The tat and fep operons constitute an entity that is not present in all staphylococcal species. Our analysis was focused on Staphylococcus aureus and S. carnosus strains. Tat deletion mutants (DeltatatAC) were unable to export active FepB, indicating that this enzyme is a Tat substrate. When the RR signal sequence from FepB was fused to prolipase and protein A, their export became Tat dependent. Since no other protein with a Tat signal could be detected, the fepABC-tatAC genes comprise not only a genetic but also a functional unit. We demonstrated that FepABC drives iron import, and in a mouse kidney abscess model, the bacterial loads of DeltatatAC and Deltatat-fep mutants were decreased. For the first time, we show that the Tat pathway in S. aureus is functional and serves to translocate the iron-dependent peroxidase FepB.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19633084 PMCID: PMC2747896 DOI: 10.1128/JB.00642-09
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Bacteriol ISSN: 0021-9193 Impact factor: 3.490