Litcius/Paper detail

Structural insight into toxin secretion by contact-dependent growth inhibition transporters

Jérémy Guérin, Istvan Botos, Zijian Zhang, Karl Lundquist, James C. Gumbart, Susan K. Buchanan

2020eLife28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Bacterial contact-dependent growth inhibition (CDI) systems use a type Vb secretion mechanism to export large CdiA toxins across the outer membrane by dedicated outer membrane transporters called CdiB. Here, we report the first crystal structures of two CdiB transporters from Acinetobacter baumannii and Escherichia coli . CdiB transporters adopt a TpsB fold, containing a 16-stranded transmembrane β-barrel connected to two periplasmic domains. The lumen of the CdiB pore is occluded by an N-terminal α-helix and the conserved extracellular loop 6; these two elements adopt different conformations in the structures. We identified a conserved DxxG motif located on strand β1 that connects loop 6 through different networks of interactions. Structural modifications of DxxG induce rearrangement of extracellular loops and alter interactions with the N-terminal α-helix, preparing the system for α-helix ejection. Using structural biology, functional assays, and molecular dynamics simulations, we show how the barrel pore is primed for CdiA toxin secretion.

Topics & Concepts

Periplasmic spaceSecretionTransmembrane proteinBacterial outer membraneTransmembrane domainTransporterATP-binding cassette transporterStructural biologyTransport proteinExtracellularEscherichia coliBiologyBiophysicsMembrane proteinCell biologyProtein structureBiochemistryChemistryMembraneGeneReceptorBacterial Genetics and BiotechnologyAntibiotic Resistance in BacteriaVibrio bacteria research studies