Publications by authors named "V E Shevchik"

Article Synopsis
  • The phytopathogenic bacterium Dickeya dadantii uses the type 2 secretion system (T2SS) to release enzymes and factors that degrade plant cell walls and contribute to its virulence.
  • The GspB protein plays a crucial role in assembling the secretin protein GspD, necessary for forming outer membrane pores, and affects the secretion of pectinase, an enzyme involved in plant cell wall degradation.
  • Structural analyses show that GspB interacts with GspD and anchors secretin channels to the inner membrane, while phylogenetic studies reveal variations of GspB in other bacteria, indicating a diverse role in secretion systems.
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The ability to interact and adapt to the surrounding environment is vital for bacteria that colonise various niches and organisms. One strategy developed by Gram-negative bacteria is to secrete exoprotein substrates via the type II secretion system (T2SS). The T2SS is a proteinaceous complex spanning the bacterial envelope that translocates folded proteins such as toxins and enzymes from the periplasm to the extracellular milieu.

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The type II secretion system (T2SS) transports fully folded proteins of various functions and structures through the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria. The molecular mechanisms of substrate recruitment by T2SS remain elusive but a prevailing view is that the secretion determinants could be of a structural nature. The phytopathogenic γ-proteobacteria, Pectobacterium carotovorum and Dickeya dadantii, secrete similar sets of homologous plant cell wall degrading enzymes, mainly pectinases, by similar T2SSs, called Out.

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Many Gram-negative commensal and pathogenic bacteria use a type II secretion system (T2SS) to transport proteins out of the cell. These exported proteins or substrates play a major role in toxin delivery, maintaining biofilms, replication in the host and subversion of host immune responses to infection. We review the current structural and functional work on this system and argue that intrinsically disordered regions and protein dynamics are central for assembly, exo-protein recognition, and secretion competence of the T2SS.

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Soft-rot diseases of plants attributed to Dickeya dadantii result from lysis of the plant cell wall caused by pectic enzymes released by the bacterial cell by a type II secretion system (T2SS). Arabidopsis thaliana can express several lines of defence against this bacterium. We employed bacterial mutants with defective envelope structures or secreted proteins to examine early plant defence reactions.

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