Direct visualization of sequence-specific DNA binding by gonococcal type IV pili

Author:

Hughes-Games Alex123ORCID,Davis Sean A.3ORCID,Hill Darryl J.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Bristol Centre for Functional Nanomaterials, HH Wills Physics Laboratory, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK

2. School of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK

3. School of Chemistry, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK

Abstract

Neisseria gonorrhoeae , the causative agent of gonorrhoea, is a major burden on global healthcare systems, with an estimated ~80–90 million new global cases annually. This burden is exacerbated by increasing levels of antimicrobial resistance, which has greatly limited viable antimicrobial therapies. Decreasing gonococcal drug susceptibility has been driven largely by accumulation of chromosomal resistance determinants, which can be acquired through natural transformation, whereby DNA in the extracellular milieu is imported into cells and incorporated into the genome by homologous recombination. N. gonorrhoeae possesses a specialized system for DNA uptake, which strongly biases transformation in favour of DNA from closely related bacteria by recognizing a 10–12 bp DNA uptake sequence (DUS) motif, which is highly overrepresented in their chromosomal DNA. This process relies on numerous proteins, including the DUS-specific receptor ComP, which assemble retractile protein filaments termed type IV pili (T4P) extending from the cell surface, and one model for neisserial DNA uptake proposes that these filaments bind DNA in a DUS-dependent manner before retracting to transport DNA into the periplasm. However, conflicting evidence indicates that elongated pilus filaments may not have such a direct role in DNA binding uptake as this model suggests. Here, we quantitatively measured DNA binding to gonococcal T4P fibres by directly visualizing binding complexes with confocal fluorescence microscopy in order to confirm the sequence-specific, comP-dependent DNA binding capacity of elongated T4P fibres. This supports the idea that pilus filaments could be responsible for initially capturing DNA in the first step of sequence-specific DNA uptake.

Funder

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

Publisher

Microbiology Society

Subject

Microbiology

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