Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, Florida 33101
2. Department of Microbiology, East Tennessee State University, James H. Quillen College of Medicine, Johnson City, Tennessee 37614
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Chlamydia
spp. express a functional type III secretion system (T3SS) necessary for pathogenesis and intracellular growth. However, certain essential components of the secretion apparatus have diverged to such a degree as to preclude their identification by standard homology searches of primary protein sequences. One example is the needle subunit protein. Electron micrographs indicate that chlamydiae possess needle filaments, and yet database searches fail to identify a SctF homologue. We used a bioinformatics approach to identify a likely needle subunit protein for
Chlamydia
. Experimental evidence indicates that this protein, designated CdsF, has properties consistent with it being the major needle subunit protein. CdsF is concentrated in the outer membrane of elementary bodies and is surface exposed as a component of an extracellular needle-like projection. During infection CdsF is detectible by indirect immunofluorescence in the inclusion membrane with a punctuate distribution adjacent to membrane-associated reticulate bodies. Biochemical cross-linking studies revealed that, like other SctF proteins, CdsF is able to polymerize into multisubunit complexes. Furthermore, we identified two chaperones for CdsF, termed CdsE and CdsG, which have many characteristics of the
Pseudomonas
spp. needle chaperones PscE and PscG, respectively. In aggregate, our data are consistent with CdsF representing at least one component of the extended
Chlamydia
T3SS injectisome. The identification of this secretion system component is essential for studies involving ectopic reconstitution of the
Chlamydia
T3SS. Moreover, we anticipate that CdsF could serve as an efficacious target for anti-
Chlamydia
neutralizing antibodies.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
44 articles.
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