| Literature DB >> 28536673 |
Jeremy Guérin1, Sarah Bigot2, Robert Schneider3, Susan K Buchanan1, Françoise Jacob-Dubuisson4.
Abstract
Initially identified in pathogenic Gram-negative bacteria, the two-partner secretion (TPS) pathway, also known as Type Vb secretion, mediates the translocation across the outer membrane of large effector proteins involved in interactions between these pathogens and their hosts. More recently, distinct TPS systems have been shown to secrete toxic effector domains that participate in inter-bacterial competition or cooperation. The effects of these systems are based on kin vs. non-kin molecular recognition mediated by specific immunity proteins. With these new toxin-antitoxin systems, the range of TPS effector functions has thus been extended from cytolysis, adhesion, and iron acquisition, to genome maintenance, inter-bacterial killing and inter-bacterial signaling. Basically, a TPS system is made up of two proteins, the secreted TpsA effector protein and its TpsB partner transporter, with possible additional factors such as immunity proteins for protection against cognate toxic effectors. Structural studies have indicated that TpsA proteins mainly form elongated β helices that may be followed by specific functional domains. TpsB proteins belong to the Omp85 superfamily. Open questions remain on the mechanism of protein secretion in the absence of ATP or an electrochemical gradient across the outer membrane. The remarkable dynamics of the TpsB transporters and the progressive folding of their TpsA partners at the bacterial surface in the course of translocation are thought to be key elements driving the secretion process.Entities:
Keywords: Omp85 transporter; contact-dependent growth inhibition; gram-negative bacteria; outer membrane; two-partner secretion; type V secretion
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28536673 PMCID: PMC5422565 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2017.00148
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Figure 1Type V secretion subtypes. The proteins involved in each system are represented in their final form, i.e., after completion of secretion. A linear representation is shown underneath the schematics. The two types of β barrels are colored in dark blue (12-stranded barrel) and dark red (16-stranded barrel). The orientation of each protein is indicated by its N and C termini (denoted N and C). The POTRA domains (small ovals) are denoted P1, P2, and P' (the latter being a POTRA-like domain in PlpD). s, signal peptide; pass, passenger domain; βb, β-barrel domain; tps, TPS domain of TpsA proteins; pd, periplasmic domain of type Ve proteins.
Figure 2Organization of TPS operons. Typical TPS operons are compared with operons coding for CDI systems found in various bacterial genera. Orphan variant cdiA-CT/cdiI cassettes are found downstream of some cdi operons that likely serve for homologous recombination with full-length cdiA genes, thus contributing to the polymorphism of the toxin moieties.
Diverse functions of TpsA proteins.
| ShlA | Cytolysin, hemolysin, pore forming toxin, autophagy induction | Braun et al., | |
| HpmA | Cytolysin, hemolysin | Uphoff and Welch, | |
| EthA | Cytolysin, hemolysin, host cell adherence, internalization process in fish | Hirono et al., | |
| HhdA | Hemolysin | Palmer and Munson, | |
| PhlA | Hemolysin | Brillard et al., | |
| ExlA | Exolysin, plasma membrane rupture of human cells, pore forming toxin | Elsen et al., | |
| LepA | Induction of inflammatory responses trough human protease-activated receptors (PARs) | Kida et al., | |
| HxuA | Heme acquisition from hemopexin | Cope et al., | |
| FHA | Adhesion to epithelial cells, biofilm formation, immunomodulation | Locht et al., | |
| HMW1/HMW2 | Adhesion to epithelial cells | St Geme and Yeo, | |
| EtpA | Intestinal colonization, adhesion to host cells by binding to the tip of flagella | Roy et al., | |
| EtpB transporter | Adhesion to epithelial cells | Fleckenstein et al., | |
| CdrA | Biofilm, binding to Psl exopolysaccharides | Borlee et al., | |
| Ap58 (EnfA) transporter | Adhesion and hemagglutination activities | Monteiro-Neto et al., | |
| CdiA | Enterobacteria species, | Contact dependent growth inhibition, biofilm | Aoki et al., |
| BcpA | Contact dependent growth inhibition, autoaggregation, biofilm, kin recognition, contact-dependent signaling | Anderson et al., | |
| HecA | Adhesin, attachment and aggregation on leaves, killing of epidermal cells | Rojas et al., | |
| HrpA | Adhesin, binding to epithelial cells, intracellular escape, immune evasion, biofilm formation | Schmitt et al., | |
| HxfA | Autoaggregation | Guilhabert and Kirkpatrick, | |
| XacFhaB | Adhesin, biofilm formation | Gottig et al., | |
| FhaB | Vascular transmission to bean seeds | Darsonval et al., | |
| MchA | Adhesin, binding to epithelial cells | Plamondon et al., | |
| MhaB | Adhesin, binding to epithelial cells | Balder et al., | |
| AbFhaB | Adhesin, binding to epithelial cells and fibronectin | Perez et al., | |
| RscA | Limitation of splenic dissemination | Nelson et al., | |
| LspA1/LspA2 | Inhibition of phagocytosis | Dodd et al., | |
| OtpA | Unknown | Choi et al., | |
| PdtA | Virulence in nematode model | Faure et al., | |
| BpaA | Unknown | Brown et al., | |
| HlpA | Seed and Root colonization | Molina et al., | |
| PfhB1, PfhB2 | Virulence in septicemic mouse model | Fuller et al., | |
Predicted CDI system based on genetic analysis.
Figure 3CDI systems. (A) Linear representation of a typical CdiA protein. In addition to the TPS domain (in darker shade of green), found in all TpsA proteins and necessary for secretion, CdiA proteins also harbor specific sequence motifs such as VENN or (Q/E)LYN that separate the long central region from the CdiA-CT domain. The first part of the CT domain (hatched) is necessary for import into the target cell, while the second part carries the toxic activity of the protein. (B) Cell entry pathways of CdiA-CT. The pre-toxin motif that demarcates the variable CdiA-CT is represented in green. The receptors of CdiA-CT domains at the surface of the target bacteria remain unknown in most cases (indicated by ?). CdiA-CTEC93 of E. coli EC93 is predicted to be a pore-forming domain that inserts into the inner membrane. For the other CdiA-CT domains, their N-terminal domains (hatched) are colored according to the membrane proteins putatively involved in their entry into the cytoplasm. The tRNase activities of CdiA-CTUPEC536 and CdiANC101 are activated by the cytoplasmic cysteine synthase A CysK and the translational elongation factor EF-Ts, respectively. The CdiA toxin of E. coli EC869 is a DNase, and E. coli NC101 and EC3006 produce tRNases. The CdiA-CT moieties of E. coli MHI813 and Photorhabdus luminescens TTO1 harbor conserved nuclease_NS2 and endonuclease_VII domains, respectively. The toxic activity of CdiA produced by Dickeya dadantii 3937 is unknown.
Factors involved in the regulation of TPS operons.
| Iron-limitation, Fur regulator | Wong and Lee, | ||
| Iron-limitation, Fur and EthR regulators, EsrAB two-component system | Hirono et al., | ||
| Iron-limitation | Brillard et al., | ||
| Iron-limitation, RcsB regulator, RssAB two-component system | Poole and Braun, | ||
| Iron-limitation | Haines et al., | ||
| RscR regulator | Nelson et al., | ||
| c-di-GMP level, FleQ regulator | Borlee et al., | ||
| BvgAS two-component system | Scarlato et al., | ||
| CpxRA two component system, Fis protein | Labandeira-Rey et al., | ||
| Phosphate limitation, PhoBR two-component system, PUMA3 system | Llamas et al., | ||
| RsmA regulator | Mercy et al., |
Figure 4Phylogenetic tree of TPS domains. Phylogenetic tree of TPS domains of TpsA proteins cited in this review. The tree shows the subdivision of TpsA proteins into two different families. The proteins also globally form clusters according to function (red for cytolysins/hemolysins, green for adhesins, orange for CDI systems, blue for proteases, dark blue for iron acquisition). The limits of the TPS domains included in the analysis were defined using both sequence similarities and secondary structure predictions, with available X-ray structures used as references. The amino acid sequences were aligned using Promals3D (Pei et al., 2008). PhyML implemented in Geneious v7.1.2 was used to generate an unrooted phylogenetic tree, where scale bars represent the number of substitutions per site, and bootstrap values above 50 (percentages of 1,000 replicates) are shown next to the branches.
Figure 5X-ray structures of TpsA proteins. Cartoon representations of Fha30 (PDB entry 1rwr), HpmA265 (3fy3), Hmw1-PP (2odl), HxuA (4mr6 and 4rt6), CdiA-CT of E. coli EC869 (4g6u), and CdiA-CT of E. cloacae (4ntq). The parallel β sheets PB1, PB2, and PB3 are colored in light green, blue, and yellow, respectively. The first β strands corresponding to the N-terminal cap are represented in red. The NPNG motif and the extra-helical β-sheet β14/15–β22/23 conserved among TpsA proteins are in blue, and specific elements from the FHA subfamily (the NPNL motif and β7/8*) are in magenta. To harmonize the nomenclature between proteins, the numbers given to the structural elements may differ from those in the original publications. (A) Views from the N-terminal top of the β-helix axis. Residues of the aromatic cluster are shown in stick representation. (B) Side view of TpsA structures. Red arrows indicate the end of the TPS domain. Of note, β14 is replaced by an α helix in Hmw1-PP, and part of that β sheet is missing in full-length HxuA. In these two structures, the extra-helical elements in the C-terminal moiety are in brown. For HxuA, structural elements responsible for the twist in the middle of the β helix are highlighted in green (α helix H1 in PB1, and β hairpin β37/β38). The M loop (in red) is represented in two conformations, with and without hemopexin, denoted bound and apo, respectively. (C) Structures of the CdiA-CT domains of CdiA proteins. The nuclease domain is highlighted in green, with the side chains of the active site residues in red. For the CdiA-CT of E. coli, the active-site Zn2+ ion is shown as a sphere, and the N-terminal α-helical bundle is colored in pink. The β hairpin involved in forming β-sheet structure with the immunity protein is in blue. The structures of the toxins were solved in complex with their respective immunity proteins (not represented), arguing that the CdiA-CT moieties must be in inactive conformations.
Figure 6Omp85 transporters: X-ray structures to mechanistic models. (A) Cartoon representations of FhaC from B. pertussis (PDB entry 4ql0) and BamA from N. gonorrhoeae (4k3b). The common structural features include the 16-strand barrel in gold, the L6 loop in blue and the last two POTRA domains in wheat and brown (POTRA1 and POTRA2 for FhaC). The β1 and β16 strands are shown in red. Specific elements include the N-terminal α helix of FhaC in purple, and the POTRA3-2-1 domains of BamA in yellow, pink, and cyan, respectively. (B) Mechanistic models for TpsB transporters and BamA proteins (upper and lower diagrams, respectively). The substrates are colored blue, unfolded in the periplasm and folded in their final locations. For FhaC, the motions of the N-terminal α helix H1 and of the POTRA2 domain are shown with black arrows (see text). The TPS domain (dark blue) interacts with the POTRA domains, and the TpsA protein is translocated through the barrel pore (green arrow). The location of the POTRA domains at this stage remains to be determined. Depending on the subfamily, the TpsA is secreted into the milieu or remains associated with its transporter by a small globular periplasmic domain harboring a disulfide bond (C-C). For BamA, the available structures indicate at least two conformations, one in which POTRA5 is away from the β barrel and β1 and β16 are close to one another with H bonds formed between them, and another characterized by the occurrence of a lateral gate caused by the reorientation of β1–β8 and POTRA5. This gate might serve for progressive folding of the substrate through the formation of a hybrid barrel with BamA, before its release in the outer membrane (green arrow denoted b; BAM-budding model). Local destabilization of the bilayer close to the β1–β16 junction might also facilitate direct insertion of the prefolded substrate in the membrane (green arrow denoted a; BAM-assisted model). The L6 loop and the rest of the BAM complex are not represented.