| Literature DB >> 31026587 |
Abhin Kumar Megta1, Arjun K Mishra2, Airi Palva3, Ingemar von Ossowski3, Vengadesan Krishnan4.
Abstract
For some Gram-positive genera and species, the long-extended and adhesive sortase-dependent pilus plays an essential role during host colonization, biofilm formation, and immune modulation. Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG is a gut-adapted commensal strain that harbors the operonic genes for the SpaCBA and SpaFED pili, both being comprised of three different protein subunits termed the backbone, tip, and basal pilins. Crystal structures of the backbone pilins (SpaA and SpaD) have recently been solved, and here we describe the high-resolution (1.5 Å) structural determination of the SpaE basal pilin. SpaE consists of two immunoglobulin-like CnaB domains, with each displaying a spontaneously formed internal isopeptide bond, though apparently slow forming in the N-terminal domain. Remarkably, SpaE contains an atypically lengthy unstructured C-terminal tail, along with an YPKN pilin motif peptide, which is normally reserved for backbone subunits. Based on our analysis of the crystal structure data, we provide a molecular model for the basal positioning of the SpaE pilin within the SpaFED pilus.Entities:
Keywords: Adhesion; Basal pilin; Host-microbe interaction; Pilus anchoring; Probiotics; Sortase-dependent pili
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31026587 DOI: 10.1016/j.jsb.2019.04.016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Struct Biol ISSN: 1047-8477 Impact factor: 2.867