| Literature DB >> 33202679 |
Florent Sebbane1, Vladimir N Uversky2,3, Andrey P Anisimov4.
Abstract
The Gram-negative bacterium Yersinia pestis causes plague, a fatal flea-borne anthropozoonosis, which can progress to aerosol-transmitted pneumonia. Y. pestis overcomes the innate immunity of its host thanks to many pathogenicity factors, including plasminogen activator, Pla. This factor is a broad-spectrum outer membrane protease also acting as adhesin and invasin. Y. pestis uses Pla adhesion and proteolytic capacity to manipulate the fibrinolytic cascade and immune system to produce bacteremia necessary for pathogen transmission via fleabite or aerosols. Because of microevolution, Y. pestis invasiveness has increased significantly after a single amino-acid substitution (I259T) in Pla of one of the oldest Y. pestis phylogenetic groups. This mutation caused a better ability to activate plasminogen. In paradox with its fibrinolytic activity, Pla cleaves and inactivates the tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI), a key inhibitor of the coagulation cascade. This function in the plague remains enigmatic. Pla (or pla) had been used as a specific marker of Y. pestis, but its solitary detection is no longer valid as this gene is present in other species of Enterobacteriaceae. Though recovering hosts generate anti-Pla antibodies, Pla is not a good subunit vaccine. However, its deletion increases the safety of attenuated Y. pestis strains, providing a means to generate a safe live plague vaccine.Entities:
Keywords: Yersinia pestis; omptin; pathogenesis; pathogenicity factor; plague; plasminogen activator
Year: 2020 PMID: 33202679 PMCID: PMC7696990 DOI: 10.3390/biom10111554
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomolecules ISSN: 2218-273X
Figure 13D structure of the plasminogen activator Pla from Yersinia pestis determined by X-ray crystallography (PDB ID 2 × 55) [30]. Two side projections (plots A,C) and a top view from the extracellular side (plot B) of Pla are shown together with the set of C8E4 detergent molecules.
Figure 2Intrinsic disorder profiles generated for the plasminogen activator Pla from Yersinia pestis (A), Omptin family outer membrane protease PgtE (UniProt ID: A0A0D6FBC6) from Salmonella enterica (B), Outer membrane protease OmpT (UniProt ID: P09169) from E. coli (C), Outer membrane protease OmpP from (UniProt ID: P34210) E. coli (D), and Outer membrane protease SopA/IcsP (UniProt ID: O33641) from Shigella flexneri (E) by DiSpi web-crawler. Outputs of different commonly used disorder predictors, PONDR® VLXT, PONDR® VL3, PONDR® VLS2B, PONDR® FIT, IUPred2 (Short), and IUPred2 (Long) are shown by red, green, blue, black, orange, and pink colors, respectively. Gray shaded area represents errors evaluated for mean disorder profile (MDP) calculated by averaging profiles of individual predictors.
Figure 3The different substrates of Pla. (A) Hemostasis cascade. Trauma or an injury activates the coagulation cascade, which leads to the production of a blood clot. The fibrinolysis inhibits the coagulation cascade and disrupts the blood clot. Dashed green and brown circular arrowheads indicate respectively a multiple steps process and a single step leading to protein cleavage. Black arrowheads show the different products of the cleaved protein. Red lines with ball indicate inhibition. Pla (pacman) acts as a protease. (B) The Pla protease cleaves proteins located at the surface of the bacteria (blue cell) and the host’s cell (yellow) or other host’s proteins. Pla also acts as an adhesin (independently of its proteolytic activity), which triggers the secretion of Yops into the host’s cell cytoplasm and inhibits the phagocyte’s ability to kill the bacteria and induce an immune response. Redline with ball indicates inhibition; dashed green arrowhead, a multiple-step process leading to caspase 3 activation; red-cross, inhibition.
Pla interactions with different substrates.
| Substrates | Biological Function/Process | Hydrolyzable Amino Acids of Substrate | Consequence | Proven or Not Substrate In Vivo | Contribution to Virulence/Pathogenesis | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Host proteins processed by Pla | ||||||
| Peroxiredoxin 6 (Prdx6) | Immune system process; ROS metabolic process | Cleaves at sites Lis173/Arg174, Lys201/Leu202, and the undefined site located in the C-terminal region | Disrupt peroxidase and phospholipase A2 activities | yes | The cleavage of Prdx6 has a little detectable impact on the progression or outcome of pneumonic plague | [ |
| Alpha2-antiplasmin (A2AP) | proteolysis; contributes to control of the pulmonary inflammatory response to infection by reducing neutrophil recruitment and cytokine production | ND | uncontrolled production of active plasmin and resulting clearance of fibrin depositions | no | A2AP is not significantly affected by the Pla protease during pneumonic plague; A2AP participating in immune modulation in the lungs has a limited impact on the course or ultimate outcome of the infection | [ |
| Plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) | inhibition of activation of plasminogen. | cleaves between residues R346 and M347 | prevent inhibition of tPA and uPA | yes | PAI-1 deficiency results in a decreased level of neutrophil influx to the pulmonary compartment during pneumonia. This leads to increased bacterial out-growth, enhanced dissemination, and decreased survival of infected mice | [ |
| Urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA) | activation of plasminogen | cleaves the single-chain uPA (scuPA) between residues Lys158 and Ile159 | cleavage led to the activation of scuPA | no | activates fibrinolysis, cell migration, and tissue remodeling | [ |
| Complement component C3 | cytokine activity; complement activation | ND 1 | ND | no | cleavage of C3 disrupts chemotaxis of inflammatory cells to foci of infection, leads to disturbances in their phagocytic activity and the inability of the complement system to form the cytolytic end product of the complement system activation, membrane attack complex | [ |
| Apoptotic molecule Fas ligand (FasL) | immune system process; its binding with its receptor induces apoptosis | cleaves at multiple sites located within the extracellular domain of FasL | ND | no | contribute to the progression of pneumonic plague | [ |
| Glutathione S-transferase A3 | immune system process; ROS metabolic process | ND | ND | no | ND | [ |
| Glutathione peroxidase 3 | immune system process; response to toxin | ND | ND | no | ND | [ |
| Tubulin polymerization-promoting protein family | cell component; structure | ND | ND | no | ND | [ |
| Pigment epithelium-derived factor | protein binding; proteolysis | ND | ND | no | ND | [ |
| Alpha-2-HS-glycoprotein | protein binding; immune system process; proteolysis | ND | ND | no | ND | [ |
| Glutathione S-transferase Mu 1 | immune system process; transferase activity | ND | ND | no | ND | [ |
| BPI fold-containing family A member 1 (sPlunc) | immune system response | ND | ND | no | ND | [ |
| Carboxypeptidase N subunit 2 | immune system process; cytokine-mediated signaling | ND | ND | no | ND | [ |
| Sulfated glycoprotein 1 | protein binding; lipid transport | ND | ND | no | ND | [ |
| BPI fold-containing family b member 1 (Lplunc1) | MAC activation, response to stress | ND | ND | no | ND | [ |
| Vinculin | actin binding; cell adhesion | ND | ND | no | ND | [ |
| Plasminogen | serine-type peptidase activity; proteolysis | cleavage at a single site between residues Arg561 and Val562 of the proenzyme | activates plasminogen through cleavage this zymogen at a single site | no | activates fibrinolysis | [ |
| Actin gamma | cell component; structure | ND | ND | no | ND | [ |
| Plastin-2 | structure; actin binding | ND | ND | no | ND | [ |
| Lipoprotein lipase | lipase activity; lipid transport | ND | ND | no | ND | [ |
| Phosphoglycerate mutase 1 | glycolysis | ND | ND | no | ND | [ |
| Complement C4-B | complement activation; signal transduction | ND | ND | no | ND | [ |
| Hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase | monosaccharide metabolic process | ND | ND | no | ND | [ |
| Calmodulin | Ca2+ binding | ND | ND | no | ND | [ |
| Apolipoprotein A-IV | lipid transporter activity; blood circulation | ND | ND | no | ND | [ |
| Thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor (TAFI) | antifibrinolytic plasma protein | ND | Pla can cleave TAFI near its C-terminus, preventing activation to TAFIa during subsequent incubation with thrombin–thrombomodulin; in addition to the direct inactivation of TAFI by Pla, TAFIa can also be inactivated through proteolysis by plasmin | yes | ND | [ |
| Tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) | TFPI is an anticoagulant protein that reversibly binds to coagulation factor Xa (FXa). This bimolecular TFPI–FXa complex is a potent inhibitor of the procoagulant complex TF:FVIIa (the primary initiator of coagulation in vivo), which acts to block further coagulation at this point in the cascade | Cleavage of TFPI by Pla occurs between residues K249 and G250 | cleavage by Pla is predicted to have procoagulant consequences; Pla disrupts the TFPI-mediated inhibition of clot formation | no | TFPI inactivation enhances coagulation | [ |
| Cathelicidins | cationic antimicrobial peptides (CAMPs) | CAMPs permeabilize bacterial lipid bilayers, resulting in the lysis of affected cells; Pla inhibit CAMPs chemoattractant properties that recruit neutrophils, monocytes, and T cells in response to infection | no | ND | [ | |
| α-2-macroglobuline | impede the plasmin activity | ND | ND | no | activates proteolysis | [ |
| Type-III secretion system effectors | inhibit phagocytosis, induce apoptosis of macrophages, destroy actin cytoskeleton and signaling pathway of activation of inflammatory cells, suppress production of cytokines and chemokines | ND | degrades most Yops | no | it is supposed that Pla coordinates the degradation of extracellular Yops that may otherwise compromise innate immunity evasion | [ |
| YapA | autotransporter | processes at multiple sites (Lys512, Lys548/Lys549, Lys594/Lys595, Lys558, and Lys604) | cleavage at the C terminus released the protein from the cell surface | no | it is supposed that YapA might be an adhesin | [ |
| YapG | autotransporter | processes at multiple sites | ND | no | does not contribute to | [ |
| YapE | autotransporter | processes at two sites (Lys232 and Lys338 but preferentially at Lys232) | cleavage is required to proteolytical activation of the protein | no | contributes to disease in the mouse model of bubonic plague by mediating bacterial aggregation and adherence to eukaryotic cells | [ |
| KatY | catalase-peroxidase | Cleavage of α-KatY (78.8 kDa) by Pla resulted in its smaller forms, β-KatY (∼50 kDa), γ-KatY (∼36 kDa) and δ-KatY (∼34 kDa) | ND | no | ND | [ |
1 “ND”, no data.
Figure 4Interactability of Pla with other Y. pestis proteins. The Pla-centered protein-protein interaction (PPI) network was generated by the Search Tool for the Retrieval of Interacting Genes; STRING (http://string-db.org/. STRING). This later generates a network of associations based on predicted and experimentally-validated information on the interaction partners of a protein of interest [108]. In the corresponding network, the nodes correspond to proteins, whereas the edges show predicted or known functional associations. Seven types of evidence are used to build the corresponding network, where they are indicated by the different colored lines: a green line represents neighborhood evidence; a red line—the presence of fusion evidence; a purple line—experimental evidence; a blue line—co-occurrence evidence; a light blue line—database evidence; a yellow line—text mining evidence; a black line—co-expression evidence [108].
Figure 5Zoomed in structure of the active site of Pla from Y. pestis illustrating some peculiarities of the local environment of four catalytic residues of this protein, Asp84, Asp86, Asp206, and His208. X-ray crystal structure of Pla from Y. pestis was used here (PDB ID 2X55) [30].
Figure 6Genomic tree and divergence based on 503 Y. pestis Genome Assembly and Annotation reports (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genome/browse/#!/prokaryotes/153/). Both the modern and ancestral phylogenetic groups are indicated. The tree was adapted from Achtman [132] and Rascovan et al. [133]. The relationship between subspecies, biovars, and SNP types is shown by Kislichkina [134].