4.6 Article

A PolyQ Membrane Protein of Vibrio cholerae Acts as the Receptor for Phage Infection

期刊

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
卷 95, 期 6, 页码 -

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AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.02245-20

关键词

Vibrio cholerae; bacteriophage; receptor; polyQ protein; phage typing

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资金

  1. National Science Foundation of China Youth Fund [81501724]

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This study identified VcpQ as the receptor for bacteriophage VP1 infection of Vibrio cholerae, with the reduction of glutamine residues in VcpQ affecting VP1 adsorption and likely being the main cause of resistance in natural resistant strains. Mutations in the polyQ stretch may provide V. cholerae with phage resistance and enhance survival against VP1 or related phages.
Bacteriophage VP1 is a typing phage used for the phage subtyping of Vibrio cholerae O1 biotype El Tor, but the molecular mechanisms of its receptor recognition and the resistance of its host to infection are mostly unknown. In this study, we aimed to identify the host receptor and its role in resistance in natural VP1-resistant strains. Generating spontaneous resistance mutations and genome sequencing mutant strains found the polyQ protein VcpQ, which carries 46 glutamine residues in its Q-rich region, to be responsible for infection by VP1. VcpQ is a membrane protein and possibly forms homotrimers. VP1 adsorbed to V. cholerae through VcpQ. Sequence comparisons showed that 72% of natural VP1-resistant strains have fewer glutamines in the VcpQ Q-rich stretch than VP1-sensitive strains. This difference did not affect the membrane location and oligomer of VcpQ but abrogated VP1 adsorption. These mutant VcpQs did not recover VP1 infection sensitivity in a V. cholerae strain with vcpQ deleted. Our study revealed that the polyQ protein VcpQ is responsible for the binding of VP1 during its infection of V. cholerae and that glutamine residue reduction in VcpQ affects VP1 adsorption to likely be the main cause of VP1 resistance in natural resistant strains. The physiological functions of this polyQ protein in bacteria need further clarification; however, mutations in the polyQ stretch may endow V. cholerae with phage resistance and enhance survival against VP1 or related phages. IMPORTANCE Receptor recognition and binding by bacteriophage are the first step for its infection of bacterial cells. In this study, we found the Vibrio cholerae subtyping phage VP1 uses a polyQ protein named VcpQ (V. cholerae polyQ protein) as the receptor for VP1 infection. Our study reveals the receptor's recognition of phage VP1 during its adsorption and the VP1 resistance mechanism of the wild resistant V. cholerae strains bearing the mutagenesis in the receptor VcpQ. These mutations may confer the survival advantage on these resistant strains in the environment containing VP1 or its similar phages.'

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