4.7 Article

The type 3 secretion system requires actin polymerization to open translocon pores

Journal

PLOS PATHOGENS
Volume 17, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1009932

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [R01AI081724, F32AI147549, T32AI007061, K22AI137296, F32AI114162]
  2. Massachusetts General Hospital Executive Committee on Research (https://ecor.mgh.harvard.edu/) Tosteson Award
  3. Charles A. King Trust Postdoctoral Research Fellowship Program
  4. Bank of America, N.A.,

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This study investigates the role of actin polymerization in T3SS-mediated translocation, showing that it is essential for the assembly of translocon pore in an open conformation and effector translocation. The activation of T3SS involves a complex process where host signals are sensed by the translocon pore, leading to effector translocation.
Many bacterial pathogens require a type 3 secretion system (T3SS) to establish a niche. Host contact activates bacterial T3SS assembly of a translocon pore in the host plasma membrane. Following pore formation, the T3SS docks onto the translocon pore. Docking establishes a continuous passage that enables the translocation of virulence proteins, effectors, into the host cytosol. Here we investigate the contribution of actin polymerization to T3SS-mediated translocation. Using the T3SS model organism Shigella flexneri, we show that actin polymerization is required for assembling the translocon pore in an open conformation, thereby enabling effector translocation. Opening of the pore channel is associated with a conformational change to the pore, which is dependent upon actin polymerization and a coiled-coil domain in the pore protein IpaC. Analysis of an IpaC mutant that is defective in ruffle formation shows that actin polymerization-dependent pore opening is distinct from the previously described actin polymerization-dependent ruffles that are required for bacterial internalization. Moreover, actin polymerization is not required for other pore functions, including docking or pore protein insertion into the plasma membrane. Thus, activation of the T3SS is a multilayered process in which host signals are sensed by the translocon pore leading to the activation of effector translocation.

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