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Sticking to the Subject: Multifunctionality in Microbial Adhesins

Peter N. Lipke, Peleg Ragonis‐Bachar

2023Journal of Fungi27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Bacterial and fungal adhesins mediate microbial aggregation, biofilm formation, and adhesion to host. We divide these proteins into two major classes: professional adhesins and moonlighting adhesins that have a non-adhesive activity that is evolutionarily conserved. A fundamental difference between the two classes is the dissociation rate. Whereas moonlighters, including cytoplasmic enzymes and chaperones, can bind with high affinity, they usually dissociate quickly. Professional adhesins often have unusually long dissociation rates: minutes or hours. Each adhesin has at least three activities: cell surface association, binding to a ligand or adhesive partner protein, and as a microbial surface pattern for host recognition. We briefly discuss Bacillus subtilis TasA, pilin adhesins, gram positive MSCRAMMs, and yeast mating adhesins, lectins and flocculins, and Candida Awp and Als families. For these professional adhesins, multiple activities include binding to diverse ligands and binding partners, assembly into molecular complexes, maintenance of cell wall integrity, signaling for cellular differentiation in biofilms and in mating, surface amyloid formation, and anchorage of moonlighting adhesins. We summarize the structural features that lead to these diverse activities. We conclude that adhesins resemble other proteins with multiple activities, but they have unique structural features to facilitate multifunctionality.

Topics & Concepts

Bacterial adhesinBiologyMicrobiologyBiofilmCell biologyPlasma protein bindingBacillus subtilisEscherichia coliBiochemistryBacteriaGeneticsGeneBacterial biofilms and quorum sensingBiochemical and Structural CharacterizationAntifungal resistance and susceptibility
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