4.6 Article

Structure-function analysis of pectate lyase Pel3 reveals essential facets of protein recognition by the bacterial type 2 secretion system

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 296, Issue -, Pages -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbc.2021.100305

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Funding

  1. CNRS (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique)
  2. ANR (Agence Nationale de la Recherche) [SYNERGY_T2SS ANR-19-CE11-0020]

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The type II secretion system transports fully folded proteins through the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria, with secretion determinants potentially being of a structural nature. Certain phytopathogenic gamma-proteobacteria secrete similar sets of enzymes via T2SS, but the fine-tuned control of protein recruitment is evident in the secretion of orthologous enzymes by different bacteria. Structural and functional analyses suggest that distant and flexible loop regions play a crucial role in protein secretion, with potential disorder-to-order transitions involved in the recruitment mechanism of T2SS.
The type II secretion system (T2SS) transports fully folded proteins of various functions and structures through the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria. The molecular mechanisms of substrate recruitment by T2SS remain elusive but a prevailing view is that the secretion determinants could be of a structural nature. The phytopathogenic gamma-proteobacteria, Pectobacterium carotovorum and Dickeya dadantii, secrete similar sets of homologous plant cell wall degrading enzymes, mainly pectinases, by similar T2SSs, called Out. However, the orthologous pectate lyases Pel3 and PelI from these bacteria, which share 67% of sequence identity, are not secreted by the counterpart T2SS of each bacterium, indicating a fine-tuned control of protein recruitment. To identify the related secretion determinants, we first performed a structural characterization and comparison of Pel3 with PelI using X-ray crystallography. Then, to assess the biological relevance of the observed structural variations, we conducted a loop-substitution analysis of Pel3 combined with secretion assays. We showed that there is not one element with a definite secondary structure but several distant and structurally flexible loop regions that are essential for the secretion of Pel3 and that these loop regions act together as a composite secretion signal. Interestingly, depending on the crystal contacts, one of these key secretion determinants undergoes disorder-to-order transitions that could reflect its transient structuration upon the contact with the appropriate T2SS components. We hypothesize that such T2SS-induced structuration of some intrinsically disordered zones of secretion substrates could be part of the recruitment mechanism used by T2SS.

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