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Molecular Microbiology

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Title: Molecular Microbiology


1
Molecular Microbiology Pathogenesis BIOL 5392
(March 4, 2009) Dr. Joseph Vogel MPRB Room
10220 jvogel_at_borcim.wustl.edu 314-747-1029
"Facts are meaningless you can use facts to
prove anything that's even remotely true!
Facts, schmacks. Homer Simpson
2
  • Additional papers you can read if you are
    interested/confused
  • Type I
  • Delepelaire. Type I secretion in gram-negative
    bacteria. Biochim Biophys Acta. 2004.
    1694149-61.
  • Type II
  • Johnson et al. Type II secretion from structure
    to function. FEMS Microbiol Lett. 2006.
    255175-86.
  • Type III
  • Cornelis GR. The type III secretion
    injectisome. Nat Rev Microbiol. 2006. 4811-25.
    Review.

3
  • Additional papers you can read if you are
    interested/confused
  • Type IV
  • Christie PJ. Type IV secretion the
    Agrobacterium VirB/D4 and related conjugation
    systems. Biochim Biophys Acta. 2004. 1694219-34.
  • Type V
  • Desvaux et al. The autotransporter secretion
    system. Res Microbiol. 2004. 15553-60.
  • Henderson et al. Type V protein secretion
    pathway the autotransporter story. Microbiol
    Mol Biol Rev. 2004. 68692-744.
  • Bonus paper
  • Buttner D, Bonas U. Common infection strategies
    of plant and animal pathogenic bacteria. Curr
    Opin Plant Biol. 2003. 6312-9.
  • TAT
  • Robinson Bolhuis. Tat-dependent protein
    targeting in prokaryotes and chloroplasts.
    Biochim Biophys Acta. 2004. 1694135-47.

4
Some people believe there is only one truly
important secretion system
5
Primitive view of the first three types of
secretion systems
6
More complicated view of secretion
Buttner Bonas. Trends Microbiol. 2002
7
Bacterial protein secretion systems (historical
landmarks)
  • 1981 First secA mutant isolated
  • 1985 First T1SS identified (E. coli
    a-hemolysin)
  • 1987 First characterization of a T2SS
    (Klebsiella)
  • (Dr. Vogel started graduate school in 1987)
  • 1987 First T5SS proteins identified (IgA1
    proteases)
  • 1990 Discovery of T3SSs (Yersinia)
  • 1996 Existence of TAT (twin-arginine pathway)
    proposed
  • 1997 T4SS proposed based on Agrobacterium
    T-DNA transfer

8
Why is it difficult for Gram-negative bacterium
to secrete proteins?
9
  • Type I Secretion
  • Type I secretions are generally known as the
    ATP-binding cassette (ABC) protein type
  • Best examples are HylA (hemolysin A) secretion
    by E. coli and RTX toxins (repeats in toxins)
  • Type I secretion systems contain only three
    different transport components (2 in the inner
    memb. and one that forms a general pore in the
    outer memb.)
  • Proteins are secreted directly through the pore
    across both membranes in one step
  • Signal sequence is at the c-terminus of the
    substrate (generally not cleaved)

10
Type I secretion (topological model of hemolysin
secretion)
Gentschev I, Dietrich G, Goebel W. Trends
Microbiol. 2002
11
  • Type II Secretion
  • Type II secretion is exemplified by Klebsiella
    oxytoca pullulanase (PulA) secretion and Vibrio
    cholerae cholera toxin secretion
  • Type II secretion is a two step process
  • Protein is first exported into the periplasm by
    the sec apparatus (can also use the Tat pathway)
  • Protein is then transported across the outer
    membrane by a dedicated secretion apparatus
    composed of 12-16 proteins
  • Type II pathway is also called the
    secreton-dependent pathway or the terminal path
    of the general secretion pathway (NOT the general
    secretion path or sec)

12
Type II secretion systems (terminal path of the
general secretion pathway)
13
Cholera toxin secretion (type II) piston?
EpsD (secretin or pore)
Cholera toxin A and B subunits
Sec machinery
Sandkvist. Biology of type II secretion. Mol
Microbiol. 2001
14
Three different versions of Type II secretion
Mattick et al 1993. Mol. Micro.
15
  • Type V Secretion
  • Type V (autotransporters or two-partner system)
  • Simple system consisting of only 1 or 2 proteins
  • Amino-terminal signal sequence
  • Export occurs in two steps
  • First step occurs by the sec machinery
  • Second step occurs by transport across from the
    periplasm and across the outer membrane via a
    b-barrel
  • Examples include Neisseria gonorrhoeae IgA1
    protease

16
Type V Secretion
Desvaux et al. 2004. Research in Microbiology
17
  • Type III secretion systems
  • First described in Yersinia species in mid-1950s
  • Y. pestis strains are unable to grow at 37
    degrees in media lacking calcium
  • Mutants that are calcium-independent are
    avirulent
  • Virulence (and calcium dependence) was due to a
    70 kb plasmid (e.g. pCD1)
  • Virulence plasmid directs massive secretion of
    10 proteins into the culture supernatant under
    inducing conditions

18
Yersinia Ysc injectisome
Guy R. Cornelis. Nature Reviews Molecular Cell
Biology 3, 742-754 (2002).
19
Salmonella type 3 secretion needles
20
Structural comparison between a flagellum and a
type III secretion apparatus
Cellular Microbiology 2000 Fig. 13.3 page 247
21
Evolutionary proposal Bacterial type III
protein secretion systems (TTSS) may have evolved
from a flagellum
Milt Saier Trends in Micro 2004. 12 113-115
Homologous structures in the basal regions of
both structures are colored the same.
Non-homologous structures are colored
dissimilarly. IM, inner (cytoplasmic) membrane
PG, peptidoglycan cell wall layer OM, outer
(lipopolysaccharide-containing) membrane.
22
Type III secretion systems (widespread) Species
T3SS Diseases Yersinia spp Ysc (Yops)
Bubonic plague Ysa in Y. enterocolitica
gastrointenstinal disorders Shigella spp Mxi
(Spa) Bacillary dysenteria Salmonella
spp SPI-1/Inv (invasion) Mild food poisoning to
life-threatening systemic infections
depending on serovar SPI-2/Ssa (intracellular
survival) Pseudomonas Psc Pneumonia chronic
bronchopneumonia aeruginosa in patients with
cystic fibrosis EPEC EHEC Esc Diarrhea,
attachment/effacement lesion Chlamydiaceae Sct
(internalization) Sexually transmitted disease,
trachoma, pneumonia, atheroschlerosis? Bord
etella Bsc (establish long term
infection) Whooping cough
23
Components of type III secretion
T3S translocation pore
  • Hollow, elongated, stiff needle-like structure
  • 45-80 nm in length
  • Length controlled by a ruler

Cylindrical base
  • Cytoplasmic secretion chaperones
  • small, acidic proteins with ampiphathic
    c-terminal helix
  • bind substrates
  • stabilize the protein and/or assist in export

24
  • Type III secretion systems
  • Secretion is sec-independent
  • Secretion occurs in one step (no periplasmic
    intermediate)
  • Signal sequence is not cleaved at the
    amino-terminus
  • (Big fight over whether it is protein and/or RNA
    based)

25
The Yersinia T3SS effectors -- used to inhibit
phagocytosis
Juris, Shao Dixon Cellular Microbiology 2002
26
  • YopH
  • yopH mutant is avirulent in mice
  • Has a 262 aa domain with tyrosine phosphatase
    activity
  • Active site is a cysteine
  • Dephosphorylates p130Cas, FAK and paxillin
    (causes disruption of focal adhesion complexes
    thereby inhibiting phagocytosis)
  • Down-regulates signalling cascades required for
    the activation of Fc-mediated respiratory burst
    in macrophages and neutrophils
  • Suppresses both T-cell cytokine production and
    expression of the B-cell co-stimulatory
    receptor B7.2

27
  • YopE
  • Acts with YopH to block phagocytosis
  • Disrupts actin stress fibers
  • GAP (GTPase-activating protein) for Rho family
    members
  • Has homology to ExoS (Pseudomonas) and SptP
    (Salmonella)

Conserved Arg finger
28
  • YopT
  • Strong depolymerizing effect on actin
  • Modifies Rho-family proteins and displaces them
    from the membrane to the cytosol
  • Appears to be a cysteine protease
  • Cleaves RhoA, Rac, and Cdc42 close to their
    carboxyl terminus, releasing them into the
    cytosol

Surface antigen p76 (Haemophilus
somnus) Filamentous haemagglutinin-like
protein Lsp2 (Haemophilus ducreyi) PfhB2
(Pasteurella multocida) All of unknown
function Conserved residues shown in blue
29
  • YopO/YpkA
  • Looks like a eukaryotic Ser/Thr kinase
  • Specific target has not yet been identified
  • Cells infected with multiple yop mutant
    expressing YopO, round-up, but do not detach
    (different from YopE)
  • Requires a eukaryotic kinase activator (actin)
  • YpkA induces disruption of actin fibers in
    transient transfection experiments of HeLa
    cells

Yellow shows invariant residues in kinases Blue
lysine is specific for Ser/Thr kinases
30
  • YopM
  • 41 kDa protein necessary virulence determinant
  • Composed of leucine-rich repeats (LRRs)
  • LRRs are found in diverse group of proteins
    (Rnase inhibitor, Toll receptors, proteoglycans,
    platlet glycoproteins)
  • Protein-protein interaction motif (signaling
    pathways)
  • Initially thought to interact with thrombin and
    inhibit thrombin-induced platelet aggregation
    (extracellular)
  • Later shown to be translocated and localizes to
    the nucleus
  • Function not clear

Examples of proteins with leucine-rich
repeats (LRR is the blue box) IpaH
(Shigella) SspH SlrP (Salmonella) YF4R
(Rhizobium) ID431 (Bradyrhizobium)
31
  • YopJ
  • Induces apoptosis in macrophages, not epithelial
    cells
  • Homologues to AvrRxv from Xanthomonas which
    activates programmed cell death in plants
  • Blocks TNF release in macrophages
  • Blocks MAP kinase activity
  • yopJ mutant is not attenuated in an animal model

YopJ (Yersinia) AVP (Adenovirus protease) Ulp1
(yeast ubiquitin-like protein protease) Catalytic
triad in yellow, green red
32
  • Type IV secretion systems
  • Plasmid transfer systems (e.g. F plasmid)
  • Adapted conjugation systems (e.g. pathogens)

33
Crown gall
Tzfira and Citovsky 2000 Molecular Plant Pathology
34
Crown gall (Agrobacterium tumefaciens)
Tzfira and Citovsky 2000 Molecular Plant Pathology
35
  • Agrobacterium tumefaciens
  • Gram negative bacterium found in the soil
  • Able to genetically transform plants (crown gall)
  • Transfers a single-stranded segment (the
    T-strand) of the bacteriums tumor-inducing (Ti)
    plasmid into the host cell

36
  • Agrobacterium tumefaciens
  • T-DNA integrates in the plant genome
  • T-strand products direct the synthesis of plant
    growth regulators results in tumorous
    proliferation of plant cells
  • T-strand products also cause the tumor to produce
    opines, compounds that represent a unique carbon
    and nitrogen source metabolized by the bacterium
  • Researchers can replace T-strand sequences with
    recombinant DNA to engineer plants for
    agricultural and research purposes

37
  • Steps of host transformation by Agrobacterium
  • plant cell recognition
  • (2) plant-wound-signal-mediated induction of
    virulence genes
  • (3) T-strand generation
  • (4) T-complex and virulence factor export to the
    host cytoplasm
  • (5) T-strand nuclear import
  • (6) T-strand integration into the host genome

38
Cellular Micro. Fig 14.1
39
virB operon
  • VirB1 trans-glycosylase
  • non-essential virulence factor- may play role
    in mediating specific contacts with plants
  • VirB2 pilin
  • VirB4, VirB11 and VirD4 ATPases (Walker boxes)
  • (VirD4 is probably the receptor for substrates)
  • VirB6 and VirB10 inner membrane pore
  • VirB7 and VirB9 outer membrane pore

40
Assembly of the VirB complex
Cellular Micro. Fig 14.3
41
Pretty model of the Agrobacterium tumefaciens T4SS
Cascales Christie, Science 2004
42
  • Type IV secretion systems
  • Plasmid transfer systems (e.g. F plasmid)
  • Adapted conjugation systems (e.g. pathogens)

43
1. Plasmid transfer systems
44
2. Adapted conjugation systems
Pertussis Toxin
T-DNA
Bordetella
A
Nucleus
Agrobacterium
A
Oncogenesis Opine production
ADP-ribosylation of GTP-binding proteins
Eukaryotic Target
Cytoskeletal Rearrangements (IL-8 induction
tyrosine phosphorylation)
Intracellular survival (e.g. prevent
phagosome- lysosome fusion)
CagA
Helicobacter
Legionella, Coxiella, Rickettsia, Brucella,
Bartonella
45
Two things you need to know about conjugation
that your mother never told you 1. Most, if
not all, conjugation systems work via a
membrane fusion event 2. DNA is not the real
substrate of conjugation systems
46
1. Plasmid transfer systems
47
Bacterial conjugation
48
  • Plasmid transfer steps
  • 1. Adherence via pilus

2. Pilus retraction
3. Fusion of the membranes
  • 4. DNA processing
  • 5. Transfer of ssDNA to the recipient

6. Synthesis of the complementary DNA strands
7. Cell separation
Brock et al. 1994
49
  • Plasmid transfer steps
  • 1. Adherence via pilus

2. Pilus retraction
3. Fusion of the membranes
  • 4. DNA processing
  • 5. Transfer of ssDNA to the recipient

6. Synthesis of the complementary DNA strands
7. Cell separation
Brock et al. 1994
50
RP4 plasmid conjugation - membrane fusion
Samuels AL, Lanka E, Davies JE. J. Bact. 2000
51
  • Plasmid transfer steps
  • 1. Adherence via pilus

2. Pilus retraction
3. Fusion of the membranes
  • 4. DNA processing
  • 5. Transfer of ssDNA to the recipient

6. Synthesis of the complementary DNA strands
7. Cell separation
Brock et al. 1994
52
  • DNA processing and transfer
  • Nicking at the oriT (origin of transfer) by a
    relaxase
  • Covalent attachment of the relaxase to the 5
    prime end of one strand
  • Unwinding of the two strands (helicase activity)
  • Transfer of the relaxasome into the recipient
    (protein ssDNA is transferred)

ssDNA intermediate
oriT
Relaxase
53
Plasmid transfer
relaxase/nickase
Plasmid transfer is mediated by transfer of a
protein (DNA can be viewed as cargo!!!)
54
  • Type IV secretion systems
  • Plasmid transfer systems (e.g. F plasmid)
  • Adapted conjugation systems (e.g. pathogens)
  • Two flavors of type IV secretion systems
  • Type IVA VirB-like (e.g. Agrobacterium VirBs)
  • Type IVB IncI-like (e.g. Legionella Dot/Icms)

55
Type IVA secretion systems
T-DNA
D4
B8
B1
B4
B6
B9
B10
B11
B5
B3
B2
B7
pKM101
L
B
C
M
D
N
E
O
F
G
A
J
R388
B
M
K
J
I
H
G
F
E
D
L
(Rh1)
Ti
E
C
D
I
F
B
RP4
C
D
E
I
F
G
N
B
F
169
E
A
L
D
C
B
L. pneum.
B3
B2
D4
B1
B4
B5
B6
B8
B9
B10
B11
B7
B. pertussis
C
D
B
A
I
F
G
H
E
H. pylori
E
528
527
525
524
T
B. suis
B3
B2
B7
B4
B5
B6
B9
B10
B11
B8
B. abortus
B3
B2
B7
B4
B5
B6
B9
B10
B11
B8
B1
B. henselae
B3
B2
B7
B4
B5
B6
B9
B10
B11
B8
Wolbachia
VirB
D4
B9
B10
B11
B8
R. etli
B9
B10
B11
B8
R. prowazekii
457
103 / 784
286 / 290
291
292
293
287
56
Type IVB secretion systems
57
  • Type IVB secretion systems
  • (not virB-like)
  • IncI plasmids
  • ColIb-P9 plasmid
  • R64 plasmid
  • P. syringae pPT23A-like plasmid
  • Legionella pneumophila dot/icm genes
  • Coxiella burnetii dot/icm homologues

58
2. Adapted conjugation systems
Pertussis Toxin
T-DNA
Bordetella
A
Nucleus
Agrobacterium
A
Oncogenesis Opine production
ADP-ribosylation of GTP-binding proteins
Eukaryotic Target
Cytoskeletal Rearrangements (IL-8 induction
tyrosine phosphorylation)
Intracellular survival (e.g. prevent
phagosome- lysosome fusion)
CagA
Helicobacter
Legionella, Coxiella, Rickettsia, Brucella,
Bartonella
59
Pertussis toxin secretion uses an oddball type IV
system
Target Cell
A
Pilus
OM
PT Holotoxin
A
IM
Coupling protein
GSP
Chaperones
CagA
S
S
VirE2, VirF
PT subunits
S
RecA, Sog
N-terminal signal sequence
T-strand/relaxase
60
How would one identify the secretion apparatus
components that directly contact substrate?
Protein being secreted
61
TrIP (transfer immunoprecipitation)
-gt modified ChIP (chromosome immunoprecipitation)
62
Definition of a bacterial type IV secretion
pathway for a DNA substrate. Cascales and
Christie. 2004. Science. 3041170-3.
63
(No Transcript)
64
End of day 1 (go back to your labs and do some
real work)
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