| Literature DB >> 26938564 |
Anna Waldhuber1, Greg A Snyder2, Franziska Römmler3, Christine Cirl4, Tina Müller5, Tsan Sam Xiao6, Catharina Svanborg7, Thomas Miethke8.
Abstract
The TIR-containing protein C (TcpC) of uropathogenic Escherichia coli strains is a powerful virulence factor by impairing the signaling cascade of Toll-like receptors (TLRs). Several other bacterial pathogens like Salmonella, Yersinia, Staphylococcus aureus but also non-pathogens express similar proteins. We discuss here the pathogenic potential of TcpC and its interaction with TLRs and TLR-adapter proteins on the molecular level and compare its activity with the activity of other bacterial TIR-containing proteins. Finally, we analyze and compare the structure of bacterial TIR-domains with the TIR-domains of TLRs and TLR-adapters.Entities:
Keywords: TIR-containing proteins; TIR-domain structure; Toll-like receptors; bacterial pathogens
Year: 2016 PMID: 26938564 PMCID: PMC4810146 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens5010025
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817
Function and eukaryotic interaction partners of bacterial Tcps.
| Bacterial TIR Protein | Organism | TIR Protein Function | TIR Protein Function | Protein Interaction with | Protein Structure | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TcpC | suppresses NF-κB activation, promotes bacterial survival in RAW264.7 macrophages | promotes virulence in UTI mouse model (bacterial burden, kidney disease) | MyD88, TLR4 | not known | Cirl | |
| TcpB (Btp1/BtpA) | suppresses NF-κB activation, inhibition of dendritic cell maturation | promotes virulence during early stages of infection in mice (systemic spread) | MyD88, TIRAP, TLR4, Microtubule | PDB IDs: | Cirl | |
| BtpB | suppresses TLR2, TLR4, TLR5, TLR9 mediated activation of NF-κB | promotes virulence in mice (survival) | not known | not known | Salcedo | |
| TlpA | suppresses NF-κB activation, promotes bacterial survival in human THP1 macrophages | promotes virulence in mice (bacterial survival, burden and lethality) | not known | not known | Newman | |
| TcpYI |
| promotes bacterial survival in murine macrophages | promotes virulence in mouse model of peritonitis (survival inside the spleen) | not known | not known | Nörenberg |
| YpTIR |
| suppresses NF-κB activation | no role in virulence | MyD88 | not known | Rana |
| TcpF |
| suppresses NF-κB activation | promotes virulence in mice (bacterial burden) | MyD88 | not known | Kraemer |
| TirS | suppresses NF-κB and MAP-kinase activation | Promotes virulence in mice (organ co-lonization) | not known | not known | Askarian | |
| PdTlp |
| not known | not known | MyD88, TLR4 | PDB ID: 3H16 | Low |
Figure 1Scheme of the interactions of Tcps with TLRs and TLR-adaptors. The surface model illustrates the interaction of Tcps with the TIR-domain of TLR4 and the adaptor- molecules MyD88 or TIRAP. Thus, Tcps may block the TLR-signaling cascade as an TLR4-receptor inhibitor and/or MyD88 or TIRAP adaptor inhibitor as indicated. Color code: cyan = Tcps, green = TLR4-TIR homodimer, yellow = DD loop region, red = BB loop, blue = TIRAP, magenta = MyD88.