The Gram-positive actinobacteria spp. are key colonizers in the development of oral biofilms due to the inherent ability of to adhere to receptor polysaccharides on the surface of oral streptococci and host cells. This receptor-dependent bacterial interaction, or coaggregation, requires a unique sortase-catalyzed pilus consisting of the pilus shaft FimA and the coaggregation factor CafA forming the pilus tip. While the essential role of the sortase machine SrtC2 in pilus assembly, biofilm formation, and coaggregation has been established, little is known about -acting factors contributing to these processes. We report here a large-scale Tn transposon screen for mutants defective in coaggregation with We obtained 33 independent clones, 13 of which completely failed to aggregate with , and the remainder of which exhibited a range of phenotypes from severely to weakly defective coaggregation. The former had Tn insertions in , , or , as expected; the latter were mapped to genes coding for uncharacterized proteins and various genes encoding the NADH dehydrogenase subunits. Electron microscopy and biochemical analyses of mutants with nonpolar deletions of genes and , a menaquinone C-methyltransferase-encoding gene downstream of the locus, confirmed the pilus and coaggregation defects. Both and mutants were defective in oxidation of MdbA, the major oxidoreductase required for oxidative folding of pilus proteins. Furthermore, supplementation of the mutant with exogenous menaquinone-4 rescued the cell growth and pilus defects. Altogether, we propose that the electron transport chain is biochemically linked to pilus assembly via oxidative protein folding. The Gram-positive actinobacterium expresses adhesive pili, or fimbriae, that are essential to biofilm formation and interactions with other bacteria, termed coaggregation. While the critical role of the conserved sortase machine in pilus assembly and the disulfide bond-forming catalyst MdbA in oxidative folding of pilins has been established, little is known about other -acting factors involved in these processes. Using a Tn transposon screen for mutants defective in coaggregation with , we found that genetic disruption of the NADH dehydrogenase and menaquinone biosynthesis detrimentally alters pilus assembly. Further biochemical characterizations determined that menaquinone is important for reactivation of MdbA. This study supports the notion that the electron transport chain is biochemically linked to pilus assembly in via oxidative folding of pilin precursors.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.00399-17 | DOI Listing |
PLoS Pathog
December 2024
Structural Studies Division, MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Francis Crick Avenue, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Type IV pili (T4Ps) are abundant in many bacterial and archaeal species, where they play important roles in both surface sensing and twitching motility, with implications for adhesion, biofilm formation and pathogenicity. While Type IV pilus (T4P) structures from other organisms have been previously solved, a high-resolution structure of the native, fully assembled T4P of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a major human pathogen, would be valuable in a drug discovery context. Here, we report a 3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Adv
December 2024
Renmin Hospital of Wuhan University, College of Chemistry and Molecular Sciences, Institute of Molecular Medicine, School of Microelectronics, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430072, P. R. China.
Programming precise and specific microbial intraspecies or interspecies interaction would be powerful for microbial metabolic regulation, signal pathway mechanism understanding, and therapeutic application. However, it is still of great challenge to develop a simple and universal method to artificially encode the microbial interactions without interfering with the intrinsic cell metabolism. Here, we proposed an extensible and flexible framework nucleic acid strategy for encoding the specific and precise microbial interactions upon self-assembly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProtein Sci
January 2025
Department of Biotechnology, Bhupat & Jyoti Mehta School of Biosciences, Indian Institute of Technology Madras, Chennai, India.
H-NS, a nucleoid-associated protein (NAP) from enterobacteria, regulates gene expression by dynamically transducing environmental cues to conformational assembly and DNA binding. In this work, we show that H-NS from Escherichia coli, which can assemble into octameric and tetrameric oligomerization states, forms spontaneous micron-sized liquid-like condensates with DNA at sub-physiological concentrations in vitro. The heterotypic condensates are metastable at 298 K, partially solubilizing with time, while still retaining their liquid-like properties.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiofouling
January 2025
Amity Institute of Biotechnology, Amity University Rajasthan, Jaipur, India.
Bacteria possess hair-like projections on their surface termed pili. The primary function of a pilus is to enable bacterial cell attachment to the host. Since pili are associated with cell adhesion, they play a major role in bacterial colonization and infection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiophys Rev
October 2024
Faculty of Science, Istanbul University, Istanbul, Turkey.
In this session, six invited speakers presented their innovative research to investigate the structure and dynamics of bacterial and archaeal supramolecular assembly systems. They explained their research from the perspective of bacterial genetics, molecular biology, biochemistry, biophysics, structural biology, cell biology, microscopy imaging, and molecular dynamics simulation. The session started with a section on the mechanism of pilus assembly in cyanobacteria.
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