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Bacterial crystalline cellulose secretion via a supramolecular BcsHD scaffold

Wiem Abidi, Marion Décossas, Lucía Torres‐Sánchez, Lucie Puygrenier, Sylvie Létoffé, Jean‐Marc Ghigo, Petya V. Krasteva

2022Science Advances26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cellulose, the most abundant biopolymer on Earth, is not only the predominant constituent of plants but also a key extracellular polysaccharide in the biofilms of many bacterial species. Depending on the producers, chemical modifications, and three-dimensional assemblies, bacterial cellulose (BC) can present diverse degrees of crystallinity. Highly ordered, or crystalline, cellulose presents great economical relevance due to its ever-growing number of biotechnological applications. Even if some acetic acid bacteria have long been identified as BC superproducers, the molecular mechanisms determining the secretion of crystalline versus amorphous cellulose remain largely unknown. Here, we present structural and mechanistic insights into the role of the accessory subunits BcsH (CcpAx) and BcsD (CesD) that determine crystalline BC secretion in the Gluconacetobacter lineage. We show that oligomeric BcsH drives the assembly of BcsD into a supramolecular cytoskeletal scaffold that likely stabilizes the cellulose-extruding synthase nanoarrays through an unexpected inside-out mechanism for secretion system assembly.

Topics & Concepts

Bacterial celluloseCelluloseSecretionBiopolymerChemistryBacteriaNanocellulosePolysaccharideCrystallinitySupramolecular chemistryBiophysicsBiochemistryNanotechnologyMaterials scienceBiologyPolymerOrganic chemistryMoleculeCrystallographyGeneticsAdvanced Cellulose Research StudiesPolysaccharides and Plant Cell WallsBiofuel production and bioconversion
Bacterial crystalline cellulose secretion via a supramolecular BcsHD scaffold | Litcius