Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston, Texas, USA
2. Department of Microbiology & Immunobiology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Posttranslocational protein folding in the Gram-positive biofilm-forming actinobacterium
Actinomyces oris
is mediated by a membrane-bound thiol-disulfide oxidoreductase named MdbA, which catalyzes oxidative folding of nascent polypeptides transported by the Sec translocon. Reoxidation of MdbA involves a bacterial
v
itamin
K
ep
o
xide
r
eductase (VKOR)-like protein that contains four cysteine residues, C93/C101 and C175/C178, with the latter forming a canonical CXXC thioredoxin-like motif; however, the mechanism of VKOR-mediated reoxidation of MdbA is not known. We present here a topological view of the
A. oris
membrane-spanning protein VKOR with these four exoplasmic cysteine residues that participate in MdbA reoxidation. Like deletion of the VKOR gene, alanine replacement of individual cysteine residues abrogated polymicrobial interactions and biofilm formation, concomitant with the failure to form adhesive pili on the bacterial surface. Intriguingly, the mutation of the cysteine at position 101 to alanine (C101A mutation) resulted in a high-molecular-weight complex that was positive for MdbA and VKOR by immunoblotting and was absent in other alanine substitution mutants and the C93A C101A double mutation and after treatment with the reducing agent β-mercaptoethanol. Consistent with this observation, affinity purification followed by immunoblotting confirmed this MdbA-VKOR complex in the C101A mutant. Furthermore, ectopic expression of the
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
VKOR analog in the
A. oris
VKOR deletion (ΔVKOR) mutant rescued its defects, in contrast to the expression of
M. tuberculosis
VKOR variants known to be nonfunctional in the disulfide relay that mediates reoxidation of the disulfide bond-forming catalyst DsbA in
Escherichia coli
. Altogether, the results support a model of a disulfide relay, from its start with the pair C93/C101 to the C175-X-X-C178 motif, that is required for MdbA reoxidation and appears to be conserved in members of the class
Actinobacteria
.
IMPORTANCE
It has recently been shown in the high-GC Gram-positive bacteria (or
Actinobacteria
)
Actinomyces oris
and
Corynebacterium diphtheriae
that oxidative folding of nascent polypeptides transported by the Sec machinery is catalyzed by a membrane-anchored oxidoreductase named MdbA. In
A. oris
, reoxidation of MdbA requires a bacterial VKOR-like protein, and yet, how VKOR mediates MdbA reoxidation is unknown. We show here that the
A. oris
membrane-spanning protein VKOR employs two pairs of exoplasmic cysteine residues, including the canonical CXXC thioredoxinlike motif, to oxidize MdbA via a disulfide relay mechanism. This mechanism of disulfide relay is essential for pilus assembly, polymicrobial interactions, and biofilm formation and appears to be conserved in members of the class
Actinobacteria
, including
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
.
Funder
HHS | National Institutes of Health
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
8 articles.
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