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Needle length control and the secretion substrate specificity switch are only loosely coupled in the type III secretion apparatus of Shigella

The type III secretion apparatus (T3SA), which is evolutionarily and structurally related to the bacterial flagellar hook basal body, is a key virulence factor used by many Gram-negative bacteria to inject effector proteins into host cells. A hollow extracellular needle forms the injection conduit o...

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Autores principales: Shen, Da-Kang, Moriya, Nao, Martinez-Argudo, Isabel, Blocker, Ariel J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Society for General Microbiology 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3542141/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22575894
http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mic.0.059618-0
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author Shen, Da-Kang
Moriya, Nao
Martinez-Argudo, Isabel
Blocker, Ariel J.
author_facet Shen, Da-Kang
Moriya, Nao
Martinez-Argudo, Isabel
Blocker, Ariel J.
author_sort Shen, Da-Kang
collection PubMed
description The type III secretion apparatus (T3SA), which is evolutionarily and structurally related to the bacterial flagellar hook basal body, is a key virulence factor used by many Gram-negative bacteria to inject effector proteins into host cells. A hollow extracellular needle forms the injection conduit of the T3SA. Its length is tightly controlled to match specific structures at the bacterial and host-cell surfaces but how this occurs remains incompletely understood. The needle is topped by a tip complex, which senses the host cell and inserts as a translocation pore in the host membrane when secretion is activated. The interaction of two conserved proteins, inner-membrane Spa40 and secreted Spa32, respectively, in Shigella, is proposed to regulate needle length and to flick a type III secretion substrate specificity switch from needle components/Spa32 to translocator/effector substrates. We found that, as in T3SAs from other species, substitution N257A within the conserved cytoplasmic NPTH region in Spa40 prevented its autocleavage and substrate specificity switching. Yet, the spa40(N257A) mutant made only slightly longer needles with a few needle tip complexes, although it could not form translocation pores. On the other hand, Δspa32, which makes extremely long needles and also formed only few tip complexes, could still form some translocation pores, indicating that it could switch substrate specificity to some extent. Therefore, loss of needle length control and defects in secretion specificity switching are not tightly coupled in either a Δspa32 mutant or a spa40(N257A) mutant.
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spelling pubmed-35421412013-04-23 Needle length control and the secretion substrate specificity switch are only loosely coupled in the type III secretion apparatus of Shigella Shen, Da-Kang Moriya, Nao Martinez-Argudo, Isabel Blocker, Ariel J. Microbiology (Reading) Microbial Pathogenicity The type III secretion apparatus (T3SA), which is evolutionarily and structurally related to the bacterial flagellar hook basal body, is a key virulence factor used by many Gram-negative bacteria to inject effector proteins into host cells. A hollow extracellular needle forms the injection conduit of the T3SA. Its length is tightly controlled to match specific structures at the bacterial and host-cell surfaces but how this occurs remains incompletely understood. The needle is topped by a tip complex, which senses the host cell and inserts as a translocation pore in the host membrane when secretion is activated. The interaction of two conserved proteins, inner-membrane Spa40 and secreted Spa32, respectively, in Shigella, is proposed to regulate needle length and to flick a type III secretion substrate specificity switch from needle components/Spa32 to translocator/effector substrates. We found that, as in T3SAs from other species, substitution N257A within the conserved cytoplasmic NPTH region in Spa40 prevented its autocleavage and substrate specificity switching. Yet, the spa40(N257A) mutant made only slightly longer needles with a few needle tip complexes, although it could not form translocation pores. On the other hand, Δspa32, which makes extremely long needles and also formed only few tip complexes, could still form some translocation pores, indicating that it could switch substrate specificity to some extent. Therefore, loss of needle length control and defects in secretion specificity switching are not tightly coupled in either a Δspa32 mutant or a spa40(N257A) mutant. Society for General Microbiology 2012-07 /pmc/articles/PMC3542141/ /pubmed/22575894 http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mic.0.059618-0 Text en © 2012 SGM http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Microbial Pathogenicity
Shen, Da-Kang
Moriya, Nao
Martinez-Argudo, Isabel
Blocker, Ariel J.
Needle length control and the secretion substrate specificity switch are only loosely coupled in the type III secretion apparatus of Shigella
title Needle length control and the secretion substrate specificity switch are only loosely coupled in the type III secretion apparatus of Shigella
title_full Needle length control and the secretion substrate specificity switch are only loosely coupled in the type III secretion apparatus of Shigella
title_fullStr Needle length control and the secretion substrate specificity switch are only loosely coupled in the type III secretion apparatus of Shigella
title_full_unstemmed Needle length control and the secretion substrate specificity switch are only loosely coupled in the type III secretion apparatus of Shigella
title_short Needle length control and the secretion substrate specificity switch are only loosely coupled in the type III secretion apparatus of Shigella
title_sort needle length control and the secretion substrate specificity switch are only loosely coupled in the type iii secretion apparatus of shigella
topic Microbial Pathogenicity
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3542141/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22575894
http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/mic.0.059618-0
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