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Título

Intermolecular latency regulates the essential C-terminal signal peptidase and sortase of the Porphyromonas gingivalis type-IX secretion system

AutorMizgalska, Danuta; Goulas, Theodoros CSIC ORCID; Rodríguez-Banqueri, Arturo CSIC ORCID; Veillard, Florian T.; Madej, Mariusz; Małecka, Ewelina; Szczesniak, Katarzyna; Ksiazek, Miroslaw; Widziołek, Magda; Guevara, Tibisay CSIC ORCID ; Eckhard, Ulrich CSIC ORCID ; Solà, Maria CSIC ORCID ; Potempa, Jan; Gomis-Rüth, F. Xavier CSIC ORCID
Palabras clavePeriodontal disease
Bacterial virulence factor
Infectious diseases
Protein secretion
X-ray crystal structure
Fecha de publicación5-oct-2021
EditorNational Academy of Sciences (U.S.)
CitaciónProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 118(40): e2103573118 (2021)
ResumenPorphyromonas gingivalis is a keystone pathogen of the human dysbiotic oral microbiome that causes severe periodontitis. It employs a type-IX secretion system (T9SS) to shuttle proteins across the outer membrane (OM) for virulence. Uniquely, T9SS cargoes carry a C-terminal domain (CTD) as a secretion signal, which is cleaved and replaced with anionic lipopolysaccharide by transpeptidation for extracellular anchorage to the OM. Both reactions are carried out by PorU, the only known dual-function, C-terminal signal peptidase and sortase. PorU is itself secreted by the T9SS, but its CTD is not removed; instead, intact PorU combines with PorQ, PorV, and PorZ in the OM-inserted “attachment complex.” Herein, we revealed that PorU transits between active monomers and latent dimers and solved the crystal structure of the ∼260-kDa dimer. PorU has an elongated shape ∼130 Å in length and consists of seven domains. The first three form an intertwined N-terminal cluster likely engaged in substrate binding. They are followed by a gingipain-type catalytic domain (CD), two immunoglobulin-like domains (IGL), and the CTD. In the first IGL, a long “latency β-hairpin” protrudes ∼30 Å from the surface to form an intermolecular β-barrel with β-strands from the symmetric CD, which is in a latent conformation. Homology modeling of the competent CD followed by in vivo validation through a cohort of mutant strains revealed that PorU is transported and functions as a monomer through a C690/H657 catalytic dyad. Thus, dimerization is an intermolecular mechanism for PorU regulation to prevent untimely activity until joining the attachment complex.
Versión del editorhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2103573118
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10261/259896
DOI10.1073/pnas.2103573118
Identificadoresdoi: 10.1073/pnas.2103573118
issn: 0027-8424
e-issn: 1091-6490
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