Abstract
AbstractShigella spp. are human bacterial pathogens that cause bacillary dysentery.
Virulence depends on a type 3 secretion system (T3SS), a highly conserved structure present in multiple important human and plant pathogens. Upon host cell contact, the T3SS translocon is delivered to the host membrane, facilitates bacterial docking to the membrane, and enables delivery of effector proteins into the host cytosol. The Shigella translocon is composed of two proteins, IpaB and IpaC, which together form this multimeric structure within host plasma membranes. Upon interaction of IpaC with host intermediate filaments, the translocon undergoes a conformational change that allows for bacterial docking onto the translocon and, together with host actin polymerization, enables subsequent effector translocation through the translocon pore. To generate additional insights into the translocon, we mapped the topology of IpaB in plasma membrane-embedded pores using cysteine substitution mutagenesis coupled with site-directed labeling and proximity-enabled crosslinking by membrane permeant sulfhydryl reactants. We demonstrate that IpaB function is dependent on post translational modification by a plasmid-encoded acyl carrier protein. We show that the first transmembrane domain of IpaB lines the interior of the translocon pore channel such that the IpaB portion of the channel forms a funnel-like shape leading into the host cytosol. In addition, we identify regions of IpaB within its cytosolic domain that protrude into and are closely associated with the pore channel. Taken together, these results provide a framework for how IpaB is arranged within translocons natively delivered by Shigella during infection.ImportanceType 3 secretion systems are nanomachines employed by many bacteria, including Shigella, which deliver into human cells bacterial virulence proteins that alter cellular function in ways that promote infection. Delivery of Shigella virulence proteins occurs through a pore formed in human cell membranes by the proteins IpaB and IpaC. Here, we define how IpaB contributes to the formation of pores natively delivered into human cell membranes by S. flexneri. We show that a specific domain of IpaB (transmembrane domain 1) lines much of the pore channel and that portions of IpaB that lie in the inside of the human cell loop back into and/or are closely associated with the pore channel. These findings provide new insights into the organization and function of the pore in serving as the conduit for delivery of virulence proteins into human cells during Shigella infection.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory