Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics McGovern Medical School, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) Houston Texas USA
Abstract
AbstractThe β‐barrel assembly machinery (Bam) complex facilitates the assembly of outer membrane proteins (OMPs) in gram‐negative bacteria. The Bam complex is conserved and essential for bacterial viability and consists of five subunits, BamA‐E. BamA is the transmembrane component, and its β‐barrel domain opens laterally to allow folding and insertion of incoming OMPs. The remaining components are regulatory, among which only BamD is essential. Previous studies suggested that BamB regulates BamA directly, while BamE and BamC serve as BamD regulators. However, specific molecular details of their functions remain unknown. Our previous research demonstrated that BamE plays a specialized role in assembling the complex between the lipoprotein RcsF and its OMP partners, required for the Regulator of Capsule Synthesis (Rcs) stress response. Here, we used RcsF/OmpA as a model substrate to investigate BamE function. Our results challenge the current view that BamE only serves as a BamD regulator. We show that BamE also directly interacts with BamA. BamE interaction with both BamA and BamD is important for function. Our genetic and biochemical analysis shows that BamE stabilizes the Bam complex and promotes bidirectional signaling interaction between BamA and BamD. This BamE function becomes essential when direct BamA/BamD communication is impeded.
Funder
National Institute of General Medical Sciences
Welch Foundation
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
5 articles.
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