A glycine zipper motif is required for the translocation of a T6SS toxic effector into target cells

Author:

Ali Jemal123,Yu Manda1ORCID,Sung Li‐Kang1,Cheung Yee‐Wai1ORCID,Lai Erh‐Min124ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Plant and Microbial Biology Academia Sinica Taipei Taiwan

2. Molecular and Biological Agricultural Sciences Program, Taiwan International Graduate Program National Chung‐Hsing University and Academia Sinica Taipei Taiwan

3. Graduate Institute of Biotechnology National Chung‐Hsing University Taichung Taiwan

4. Biotechnology Center National Chung‐Hsing University Taichung Taiwan

Abstract

AbstractType VI secretion systems (T6SSs) can deliver diverse toxic effectors into eukaryotic and bacterial cells. Although much is known about the regulation and assembly of T6SS, the translocation mechanism of effectors into the periplasm and/or cytoplasm of target cells remains elusive. Here, we use the Agrobacterium tumefaciens DNase effector Tde1 to unravel the mechanism of translocation from attacker to prey. We demonstrate that Tde1 binds to its adaptor Tap1 through the N‐terminus, which harbors continuous copies of GxxxG motifs resembling the glycine zipper structure found in proteins involved in the membrane channel formation. Amino acid substitutions on G39xxxG43 motif do not affect Tde1–Tap1 interaction and secretion but abolish its membrane permeability and translocation of its fluorescent fusion protein into prey cells. The data suggest that G39xxxG43 governs the delivery of Tde1 into target cells by permeabilizing the cytoplasmic membrane. Considering the widespread presence of GxxxG motifs in bacterial effectors and pore‐forming toxins, we propose that glycine zipper‐mediated permeabilization is a conserved mechanism used by bacterial effectors for translocation across target cell membranes.

Funder

Academia Sinica

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

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