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Toxin import through the antibiotic efflux channel TolC

Nicholas G. Housden, Melissa N. Webby, E.D. Lowe, Tarick J. El‐Baba, Renata Kaminska, Christina Redfield, Carol V. Robinson, Colin Kleanthous

2021Nature Communications31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Bacteria often secrete diffusible protein toxins (bacteriocins) to kill bystander cells during interbacterial competition. Here, we use biochemical, biophysical and structural analyses to show how a bacteriocin exploits TolC, a major outer-membrane antibiotic efflux channel in Gram-negative bacteria, to transport itself across the outer membrane of target cells. Klebicin C (KlebC), a rRNase toxin produced by Klebsiella pneumoniae, binds TolC of a related species (K. quasipneumoniae) with high affinity through an N-terminal, elongated helical hairpin domain common amongst bacteriocins. The KlebC helical hairpin opens like a switchblade to bind TolC. A cryo-EM structure of this partially translocated state, at 3.1 Å resolution, reveals that KlebC associates along the length of the TolC channel. Thereafter, the unstructured N-terminus of KlebC protrudes beyond the TolC iris, presenting a TonB-box sequence to the periplasm. Association with proton-motive force-linked TonB in the inner membrane drives toxin import through the channel. Finally, we demonstrate that KlebC binding to TolC blocks drug efflux from bacteria. Our results indicate that TolC, in addition to its known role in antibiotic export, can function as a protein import channel for bacteriocins.

Topics & Concepts

Periplasmic spaceEffluxBacteriocinBacterial outer membraneBiologyBacteriaTransport proteinInner membraneMembrane transport proteinColicinCell biologyMembrane proteinBiophysicsEscherichia coliMicrobiologyBiochemistryMembraneGeneticsGeneClostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens researchEscherichia coli research studiesBacterial Genetics and Biotechnology