| Literature DB >> 24833341 |
Veera Kainulainen1, Timo K Korhonen2.
Abstract
Biological moonlighting refers to proteins which express more than one function. Moonlighting proteins occur in pathogenic and commensal as well as in Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. The canonical functions of moonlighting proteins are in essential cellular processes, i.e., glycolysis, protein synthesis, chaperone activity, and nucleic acid stability, and their moonlighting functions include binding to host epithelial and phagocytic cells, subepithelia, cytoskeleton as well as to mucins and circulating proteins of the immune and hemostatic systems. Sequences of the moonlighting proteins do not contain known motifs for surface export or anchoring, and it has remained open whether bacterial moonlighting proteins are actively secreted to the cell wall or whether they are released from traumatized cells and then rebind onto the bacteria. In lactobacilli, ionic interactions with lipoteichoic acids and with cell division sites are important for surface localization of the proteins. Moonlighting proteins represent an abundant class of bacterial adhesins that are part of bacterial interactions with the environment and in responses to environmental changes. Multifunctionality in bacterial surface proteins appears common: the canonical adhesion proteins fimbriae express also nonadhesive functions, whereas the mobility organelles flagella as well as surface proteases express adhesive functions.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24833341 PMCID: PMC4009768 DOI: 10.3390/biology3010178
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biology (Basel) ISSN: 2079-7737
Bacterial moonlighting proteins binding to host components.
| Moonlighting protein | Moonlighting function | Bacterial species | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Binding to plasmin(ogen) | [ | ||
| Binding to urokinase receptor on human pharyngeal cells |
| [ | |
| Binding to lysozyme |
| [ | |
| Binding to actin | [ | ||
| Binding to myosin |
| [ | |
| Binding to albumin |
| [ | |
| Binding to fibrinogen |
| [ | |
| Binding to fibronectin | [ | ||
| Binding to other bacterial species | Group B | [ | |
| Binding to intestinal epithelial cells, competitive exclusion and displacement of |
| [ | |
| Coadhesin of |
| [ | |
| Binding to intestinal epithelial cells | [ | ||
| Binding to colonic, porcine or vaginal mucin | [ | ||
| Binding to A and B blood antigens |
| [ | |
| Binding to porcine tracheal rings |
| [ | |
| EGF-receptor | [ | ||
| Binding to C5a complement protein |
| [ | |
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| Binding to plasmin(ogen) | [ | ||
| Binding to fibronectin |
| [ | |
| Binding to laminin | [ | ||
| Binding to collagen | [ | ||
| Binding to albumin |
| [ | |
| Binding to salivary mucin | [ | ||
| Binding to intestinal epithelial cells | [ | ||
| Binding to C4b-binding proteins |
| [ | |
| Binding to other bacterial species |
| [ | |
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| Binding to flamingo cadherin |
| [ | |
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| Binding to collagen |
| [ | |
| Binding to other bacterial species |
| [ | |
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| Binding to plasmin(ogen) |
| [ | |
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| Binding to plasmin(ogen) | [ | ||
| Binding to actin | Group B streptococci | [ | |
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| Binding to plasmin(ogen) | [ | ||
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| Binding to plasmin(ogen) | [ | ||
| Binding to intestinal epithelial cells, competitive exclusion and displacement of |
| [ | |
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| Binding to plasmin(ogen) | [ | ||
| Binding to fibronectin |
| [ | |
| Binding to collagen I and laminin |
| [ | |
| Binding to other bacterial species |
| [ | |
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| Binding to plasmin(ogen) |
| [ | |
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| Binding to plasmin(ogen) |
| [ | |
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| Binding to Caco-2 cells |
| [ | |
| Binding to eukaryotic Hsp60 |
| [ | |
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| Binding to laminin and fibronectin |
| [ | |
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| Binding to salivary mucin |
| [ | |
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| Binding to fibronectin |
| [ | |
| Binding to plasmin(ogen) |
| [ | |
| Binding to fibronectin |
| [ | |
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| Binding to salivary mucin |
| [ | |
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| Binding to plasmin(ogen) | [ | ||
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| Binding to plasmin(ogen) | [ | ||
| Stimulation of dendritic cell maturation by binding CCR5 |
| [ | |
| Competition with HIVfor CCR5 binding |
| [ | |
| Mediation of LAB adherence to yeast cells |
| [ | |
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| Binding to intestinal HT-29 cells and mucus; stimulation of IL-8 secretion in human macrophages and HT-29 cells; aggregation of |
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| Binding to plasmin(ogen) | [ | ||
| Binding to plasma Factor H and Factor H-related protein 1 (FHR-1) |
| [ | |
| Binding to intestinal epithelial cells and HT-MTX-derived mucus |
| [ | |
| Binding to salivary mucin |
| [ | |
| Binding to intestinal epithelial cells, competitive exclusion and displacement of |
| [ | |
| Binding to fibronectin |
| [ | |
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| Binding to salivary mucin |
| [ | |
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| Binding of plasmi(ogen) |
| [ | |
| Binding to fibronectin |
| [ | |
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| Binding to salivary mucin |
| [ | |
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| Binding of plasmin(ogen) |
| [ | |
| Binding to fibronectin |
| [ | |
| Binding and invasion to epithelial and endothelial cells |
| [ | |
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| Binding to salivary mucin |
| [ | |
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| Binding to epithelial cell ldolase, GAPDH and cyclophilin A |
| [ | |
Figure 1Adherence of L. crispatus ST1 and binding of His6-GS of ST1 are affected by pH. (A) Adherence of L. crispatus ST1 at pH 4 and pH 8 to the immobilized basement membrane preparation Matrigel and to BSA. Prior to the assays, the bacteria from an overnight culture were washed with the pH 4 or the pH 8 buffer, and the adhesion assays were performed at the corresponding pH. Means of adherent bacteria in 20 randomly chosen microscopic fields of 1.6 × 104 μm2 and standard deviations are shown. (B) Binding of purified His6-GS to immobilized laminin was tested by surface plasmon resonance at pH 5.5, 6.0 and 6.5 (Adapted from [28] Copyright© American Society for Microbiology).
Figure 2Release of moonlighting proteins from L. crispatus ST1 surface and reassociation of recombinant proteins onto the cell wall. (A) Western blotting of GS, GPI, enolase, and GAPDH from the surface of L. crispatus ST1 cells and from the cell-free buffer. The cells were incubated at pH 4 or pH 8 for 1 h, and the moonlighting proteins in neutralized samples were visualized by immunoblotting. (B) Release of moonlighting proteins in the presence of increasing concentrations of the cationic peptide LL-37. L. crispatus ST1 cells were treated with LL-37 at the indicated concentrations, and the moonlighting proteins in the buffer were visualized by Western blotting. (C) Binding of His6-GPI proteins of L. crispatus ST1 and L. rhamnosus GG to bacterial cells at pH 4. The binding was visualized by indirect immunofluorescence, phase contrast images of the microscopic field are also shown. The arrows indicate protein binding to bacterial cell surface. Size bar, 3 µm. (Adapted from [28] Copyright© American Society for Microbiology).
Figure 3Schematic illustration of the association of moonlighting proteins with the cell surface of Lactobacillus. (A) Moonlighting proteins (shown in red, blue, yellow, purple and turquoise) of Lactobacillus associate to the cell surface via electrostatic or ionic interactions (B) and they are released into surroundings in stress situations, such as neutral or alkaline pH or presence of cathelidicins or bile acids. The surface location of the S-layer protein (shown in green) with the pI of 10, is not affected by environmental changes. (C) The extracellularly released moonlighting proteins associate back onto the cell surface in favorable environmental conditions, i.e., at acidic pH. The proteins associate with the cell surface of the same lactobacillar species where the proteins were originally released, but also with the cell surface of other lactobacillar species. The binding is not evenly distributed around the cells but is concentrated to cell division areas as well as to the cell poles. The arrows indicate the moonlighting proteins and arrowheads the S-layer protein.