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Structure-Function Analysis of the Curli Accessory Protein CsgE Defines Surfaces Essential for Coordinating Amyloid Fiber Formation

Curli amyloid fibers are produced as part of the extracellular biofilm matrix and are composed primarily of the major structural subunit CsgA. The CsgE chaperone facilitates the secretion of CsgA through CsgG by forming a cap at the base of the nonameric CsgG outer membrane pore. We elucidated a ser...

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Autores principales: Klein, Roger D., Shu, Qin, Cusumano, Zachary T., Nagamatsu, Kanna, Gualberto, Nathaniel C., Lynch, Aaron J. L., Wu, Chao, Wang, Wenjie, Jain, Neha, Pinkner, Jerome S., Amarasinghe, Gaya K., Hultgren, Scott J., Frieden, Carl, Chapman, Matthew R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6050966/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30018113
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01349-18
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author Klein, Roger D.
Shu, Qin
Cusumano, Zachary T.
Nagamatsu, Kanna
Gualberto, Nathaniel C.
Lynch, Aaron J. L.
Wu, Chao
Wang, Wenjie
Jain, Neha
Pinkner, Jerome S.
Amarasinghe, Gaya K.
Hultgren, Scott J.
Frieden, Carl
Chapman, Matthew R.
author_facet Klein, Roger D.
Shu, Qin
Cusumano, Zachary T.
Nagamatsu, Kanna
Gualberto, Nathaniel C.
Lynch, Aaron J. L.
Wu, Chao
Wang, Wenjie
Jain, Neha
Pinkner, Jerome S.
Amarasinghe, Gaya K.
Hultgren, Scott J.
Frieden, Carl
Chapman, Matthew R.
author_sort Klein, Roger D.
collection PubMed
description Curli amyloid fibers are produced as part of the extracellular biofilm matrix and are composed primarily of the major structural subunit CsgA. The CsgE chaperone facilitates the secretion of CsgA through CsgG by forming a cap at the base of the nonameric CsgG outer membrane pore. We elucidated a series of finely tuned nonpolar and charge-charge interactions that facilitate the oligomerization of CsgE and its ability to transport unfolded CsgA to CsgG for translocation. CsgE oligomerization in vitro is temperature dependent and is disrupted by mutations in the W48 and F79 residues. Using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), we identified two regions of CsgE involved in the CsgE-CsgA interaction: a head comprising a positively charged patch centered around R47 and a stem comprising a negatively charged patch containing E31 and E85. Negatively charged residues in the intrinsically disordered N- and C-terminal “tails” were not implicated in this interaction. Head and stem residues were mutated and interrogated using in vivo measurements of curli production and in vitro amyloid polymerization assays. The R47 head residue of CsgE is required for stabilization of CsgA- and CsgE-mediated curli fiber formation. Mutation of the E31 and E85 stem residues to positively charged side chains decreased CsgE-mediated curli fiber formation but increased CsgE-mediated stabilization of CsgA. No single-amino-acid substitutions in the head, stem, or tail regions affected the ability of CsgE to cap the CsgG pore as determined by a bile salt sensitivity assay. These mechanistic insights into the directed assembly of functional amyloids in extracellular biofilms elucidate possible targets for biofilm-associated bacterial infections.
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spelling pubmed-60509662018-07-24 Structure-Function Analysis of the Curli Accessory Protein CsgE Defines Surfaces Essential for Coordinating Amyloid Fiber Formation Klein, Roger D. Shu, Qin Cusumano, Zachary T. Nagamatsu, Kanna Gualberto, Nathaniel C. Lynch, Aaron J. L. Wu, Chao Wang, Wenjie Jain, Neha Pinkner, Jerome S. Amarasinghe, Gaya K. Hultgren, Scott J. Frieden, Carl Chapman, Matthew R. mBio Research Article Curli amyloid fibers are produced as part of the extracellular biofilm matrix and are composed primarily of the major structural subunit CsgA. The CsgE chaperone facilitates the secretion of CsgA through CsgG by forming a cap at the base of the nonameric CsgG outer membrane pore. We elucidated a series of finely tuned nonpolar and charge-charge interactions that facilitate the oligomerization of CsgE and its ability to transport unfolded CsgA to CsgG for translocation. CsgE oligomerization in vitro is temperature dependent and is disrupted by mutations in the W48 and F79 residues. Using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), we identified two regions of CsgE involved in the CsgE-CsgA interaction: a head comprising a positively charged patch centered around R47 and a stem comprising a negatively charged patch containing E31 and E85. Negatively charged residues in the intrinsically disordered N- and C-terminal “tails” were not implicated in this interaction. Head and stem residues were mutated and interrogated using in vivo measurements of curli production and in vitro amyloid polymerization assays. The R47 head residue of CsgE is required for stabilization of CsgA- and CsgE-mediated curli fiber formation. Mutation of the E31 and E85 stem residues to positively charged side chains decreased CsgE-mediated curli fiber formation but increased CsgE-mediated stabilization of CsgA. No single-amino-acid substitutions in the head, stem, or tail regions affected the ability of CsgE to cap the CsgG pore as determined by a bile salt sensitivity assay. These mechanistic insights into the directed assembly of functional amyloids in extracellular biofilms elucidate possible targets for biofilm-associated bacterial infections. American Society for Microbiology 2018-07-17 /pmc/articles/PMC6050966/ /pubmed/30018113 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01349-18 Text en Copyright © 2018 Klein et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Klein, Roger D.
Shu, Qin
Cusumano, Zachary T.
Nagamatsu, Kanna
Gualberto, Nathaniel C.
Lynch, Aaron J. L.
Wu, Chao
Wang, Wenjie
Jain, Neha
Pinkner, Jerome S.
Amarasinghe, Gaya K.
Hultgren, Scott J.
Frieden, Carl
Chapman, Matthew R.
Structure-Function Analysis of the Curli Accessory Protein CsgE Defines Surfaces Essential for Coordinating Amyloid Fiber Formation
title Structure-Function Analysis of the Curli Accessory Protein CsgE Defines Surfaces Essential for Coordinating Amyloid Fiber Formation
title_full Structure-Function Analysis of the Curli Accessory Protein CsgE Defines Surfaces Essential for Coordinating Amyloid Fiber Formation
title_fullStr Structure-Function Analysis of the Curli Accessory Protein CsgE Defines Surfaces Essential for Coordinating Amyloid Fiber Formation
title_full_unstemmed Structure-Function Analysis of the Curli Accessory Protein CsgE Defines Surfaces Essential for Coordinating Amyloid Fiber Formation
title_short Structure-Function Analysis of the Curli Accessory Protein CsgE Defines Surfaces Essential for Coordinating Amyloid Fiber Formation
title_sort structure-function analysis of the curli accessory protein csge defines surfaces essential for coordinating amyloid fiber formation
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6050966/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30018113
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01349-18
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