Deoxycholate Interacts with IpaD of Shigella flexneri in Inducing the Recruitment of IpaB to the Type III Secretion Apparatus Needle TipS
Type III secretion (TTS) is an essential virulence function for Shigella flexneri that delivers effector proteins that are responsible for bacterial invasion of intestinal epithelial cells. The Shigella TTS apparatus (TTSA) consists of a basal body that spans the bacterial inner and outer membranes...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 2008-07, Vol.283 (27), p.18646-18654 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Type III secretion (TTS) is an essential virulence function for
Shigella flexneri
that delivers effector proteins that are
responsible for bacterial invasion of intestinal epithelial cells. The
Shigella
TTS apparatus (TTSA) consists of a basal body that spans the
bacterial inner and outer membranes and a needle exposed at the pathogen
surface. At the distal end of the needle is a “tip complex”
composed of invasion plasmid antigen D (IpaD). IpaD not only regulates TTS,
but is required for the recruitment and stable association of the translocator
protein IpaB at the TTSA needle tip in the presence of deoxycholate or other
bile salts. This phenomenon is not accompanied by induction of TTS or the
recruitment of IpaC to the
Shigella
surface. We now show that IpaD
specifically binds fluorescein-labeled deoxycholate and, based on energy
transfer measurements and docking simulations, this interaction appears to
occur where the N-terminal domain of IpaD meets its central coiled-coil, a
region that may also be involved in needle-tip interactions. TTS is initiated
as a series of distinct steps and that small molecules present in the
bacterial milieu are capable of inducing the first step of TSS through
interactions with the needle tip protein IpaD. Furthermore, the amino acids
proposed to be important for deoxycholate binding by IpaD appear to have
significant roles in regulating tip complex composition and pathogen entry
into host cells. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |
DOI: | 10.1074/jbc.M802799200 |