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TapA acts as specific chaperone in TasA filament formation by strand complementation

Studying mechanisms of bacterial biofilm generation is of vital importance to understanding bacterial cell–cell communication, multicellular cohabitation principles, and the higher resilience of microorganisms in a biofilm against antibiotics. Biofilms of the nonpathogenic, gram-positive soil bacter...

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Autores principales: Roske, Yvette, Lindemann, Florian, Diehl, Anne, Cremer, Nils, Higman, Victoria A., Schlegel, Brigitte, Leidert, Martina, Driller, Kristina, Turgay, Kürşad, Schmieder, Peter, Heinemann, Udo, Oschkinat, Hartmut
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: National Academy of Sciences 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10151520/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37068239
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2217070120
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author Roske, Yvette
Lindemann, Florian
Diehl, Anne
Cremer, Nils
Higman, Victoria A.
Schlegel, Brigitte
Leidert, Martina
Driller, Kristina
Turgay, Kürşad
Schmieder, Peter
Heinemann, Udo
Oschkinat, Hartmut
author_facet Roske, Yvette
Lindemann, Florian
Diehl, Anne
Cremer, Nils
Higman, Victoria A.
Schlegel, Brigitte
Leidert, Martina
Driller, Kristina
Turgay, Kürşad
Schmieder, Peter
Heinemann, Udo
Oschkinat, Hartmut
author_sort Roske, Yvette
collection PubMed
description Studying mechanisms of bacterial biofilm generation is of vital importance to understanding bacterial cell–cell communication, multicellular cohabitation principles, and the higher resilience of microorganisms in a biofilm against antibiotics. Biofilms of the nonpathogenic, gram-positive soil bacterium Bacillus subtilis serve as a model system with biotechnological potential toward plant protection. Its major extracellular matrix protein components are TasA and TapA. The nature of TasA filaments has been of debate, and several forms, amyloidic and non-Thioflavin T-stainable have been observed. Here, we present the three-dimensional structure of TapA and uncover the mechanism of TapA-supported growth of nonamyloidic TasA filaments. By analytical ultracentrifugation and NMR, we demonstrate TapA-dependent acceleration of filament formation from solutions of folded TasA. Solid-state NMR revealed intercalation of the N-terminal TasA peptide segment into subsequent protomers to form a filament composed of β-sandwich subunits. The secondary structure around the intercalated N-terminal strand β0 is conserved between filamentous TasA and the Fim and Pap proteins, which form bacterial type I pili, demonstrating such construction principles in a gram-positive organism. Analogous to the chaperones of the chaperone-usher pathway, the role of TapA is in donating its N terminus to serve for TasA folding into an Ig domain-similar filament structure by donor-strand complementation. According to NMR and since the V-set Ig fold of TapA is already complete, its participation within a filament beyond initiation is unlikely. Intriguingly, the most conserved residues in TasA-like proteins (camelysines) of Bacillaceae are located within the protomer interface.
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spelling pubmed-101515202023-05-03 TapA acts as specific chaperone in TasA filament formation by strand complementation Roske, Yvette Lindemann, Florian Diehl, Anne Cremer, Nils Higman, Victoria A. Schlegel, Brigitte Leidert, Martina Driller, Kristina Turgay, Kürşad Schmieder, Peter Heinemann, Udo Oschkinat, Hartmut Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Biological Sciences Studying mechanisms of bacterial biofilm generation is of vital importance to understanding bacterial cell–cell communication, multicellular cohabitation principles, and the higher resilience of microorganisms in a biofilm against antibiotics. Biofilms of the nonpathogenic, gram-positive soil bacterium Bacillus subtilis serve as a model system with biotechnological potential toward plant protection. Its major extracellular matrix protein components are TasA and TapA. The nature of TasA filaments has been of debate, and several forms, amyloidic and non-Thioflavin T-stainable have been observed. Here, we present the three-dimensional structure of TapA and uncover the mechanism of TapA-supported growth of nonamyloidic TasA filaments. By analytical ultracentrifugation and NMR, we demonstrate TapA-dependent acceleration of filament formation from solutions of folded TasA. Solid-state NMR revealed intercalation of the N-terminal TasA peptide segment into subsequent protomers to form a filament composed of β-sandwich subunits. The secondary structure around the intercalated N-terminal strand β0 is conserved between filamentous TasA and the Fim and Pap proteins, which form bacterial type I pili, demonstrating such construction principles in a gram-positive organism. Analogous to the chaperones of the chaperone-usher pathway, the role of TapA is in donating its N terminus to serve for TasA folding into an Ig domain-similar filament structure by donor-strand complementation. According to NMR and since the V-set Ig fold of TapA is already complete, its participation within a filament beyond initiation is unlikely. Intriguingly, the most conserved residues in TasA-like proteins (camelysines) of Bacillaceae are located within the protomer interface. National Academy of Sciences 2023-04-17 2023-04-25 /pmc/articles/PMC10151520/ /pubmed/37068239 http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2217070120 Text en Copyright © 2023 the Author(s). Published by PNAS. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This open access article is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 (CC BY) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Biological Sciences
Roske, Yvette
Lindemann, Florian
Diehl, Anne
Cremer, Nils
Higman, Victoria A.
Schlegel, Brigitte
Leidert, Martina
Driller, Kristina
Turgay, Kürşad
Schmieder, Peter
Heinemann, Udo
Oschkinat, Hartmut
TapA acts as specific chaperone in TasA filament formation by strand complementation
title TapA acts as specific chaperone in TasA filament formation by strand complementation
title_full TapA acts as specific chaperone in TasA filament formation by strand complementation
title_fullStr TapA acts as specific chaperone in TasA filament formation by strand complementation
title_full_unstemmed TapA acts as specific chaperone in TasA filament formation by strand complementation
title_short TapA acts as specific chaperone in TasA filament formation by strand complementation
title_sort tapa acts as specific chaperone in tasa filament formation by strand complementation
topic Biological Sciences
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10151520/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37068239
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2217070120
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