Affiliation:
1. Biozentrum, University of Basel, Basel 4056, Switzerland
Abstract
The evolutionary conserved YopJ family comprises numerous type-III-secretion system (T3SS) effectors of diverse mammalian and plant pathogens that acetylate host proteins to dampen immune responses. Acetylation is mediated by a central acetyltransferase domain that is flanked by conserved regulatory sequences, while a nonconserved N-terminal extension encodes the T3SS-specific translocation signal.
Bartonella
spp. are facultative-intracellular pathogens causing intraerythrocytic bacteremia in their mammalian reservoirs and diverse disease manifestations in incidentally infected humans. Bartonellae do not encode a T3SS, but most species possess a type-IV-secretion system (T4SS) to translocate
Bartonella
effector proteins (Beps) into host cells. Here we report that the YopJ homologs present in Bartonellae species represent genuine T4SS effectors. Like YopJ family T3SS effectors of mammalian pathogens, the “
Bartonella
YopJ-like effector A” (ByeA) of
Bartonella taylorii
also targets MAP kinase signaling to dampen proinflammatory responses, however, translocation depends on a functional T4SS. A split NanoLuc luciferase-based translocation assay identified sequences required for T4SS-dependent translocation in conserved regulatory regions at the C-terminus and proximal to the N-terminus of ByeA. The T3SS effectors YopP from
Yersinia enterocolitica
and AvrA from
Salmonella
Typhimurium were also translocated via the
Bartonella
T4SS, while ByeA was not translocated via the
Yersinia
T3SS. Our data suggest that YopJ family T3SS effectors may have evolved from an ancestral T4SS effector, such as ByeA of
Bartonella
. In this evolutionary scenario, the signal for T4SS-dependent translocation encoded by N- and C-terminal sequences remained functional in the derived T3SS effectors due to the essential role these sequences coincidentally play in regulating acetyltransferase activity.
Funder
Swiss National Science Foundation
Biozentrum, University of Basel
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences