4.7 Article

Photorhabdus luminescens TccC3 Toxin Targets the Dynamic Population of F-Actin and Impairs Cell Cortex Integrity

期刊

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23137026

关键词

TccC3; actin; ADP-ribosylation; bacterial toxin; calponin-homology domain; actin dynamics; Cryo-EM; spontaneous nucleation; blebbing

资金

  1. National Institute of General Medical Sciences and Heart, Lung and Blood Institute of the NIH [R01GM114666, R35GM122510, R01HL138579]
  2. Ohio State University College of Medicine, Office of Research Dean's Bridge Funding Program

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The bacterial toxin TccC3 modifies actin, leading to various effects on the cytoskeleton, including nucleation, recycling, and interaction with other proteins. TccC3 also induces membrane blebbing in cells.
Due to its essential role in cellular processes, actin is a common target for bacterial toxins. One such toxin, TccC3, is an effector domain of the ABC-toxin produced by entomopathogenic bacteria of Photorhabdus spp. Unlike other actin-targeting toxins, TccC3 uniquely ADP-ribosylates actin at Thr-148, resulting in the formation of actin aggregates and inhibition of phagocytosis. It has been shown that the fully modified F-actin is resistant to depolymerization by cofilin and gelsolin, but their effects on partially modified actin were not explored. We found that only F-actin unprotected by tropomyosin is the physiological TccC3 substrate. Yet, ADP-ribosylated G-actin can be produced upon cofilin-accelerated F-actin depolymerization, which was only mildly inhibited in partially modified actin. The affinity of TccC3-ADP-ribosylated G-actin for profilin and thymosin-beta 4 was weakened moderately but sufficiently to potentiate spontaneous polymerization in their presence. Interestingly, the Arp2/3-mediated nucleation was also potentiated by T148-ADP-ribosylation. Notably, even partially modified actin showed reduced bundling by plastins and alpha-actinin. In agreement with the role of these and other tandem calponin-homology domain actin organizers in the assembly of the cortical actin network, TccC3 induced intense membrane blebbing in cultured cells. Overall, our data suggest that TccC3 imposes a complex action on the cytoskeleton by affecting F-actin nucleation, recycling, and interaction with actin-binding proteins involved in the integration of actin filaments with each other and cellular elements.

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