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1.
We previously identified a Serratia marcescens extracellular protein, HasA, able to bind heme and required for iron acquisition from heme and hemoglobin by the bacterium. This novel type of extracellular protein does not have a signal peptide and does not show sequence similarities to other proteins. HasA secretion was reconstituted in Escherichia coli, and we show here that like many proteins lacking a signal peptide, HasA has a C-terminal targeting sequence and is secreted by a specific ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporter consisting of three proteins, one inner membrane protein with a conserved ATP binding domain, called the ABC; a second inner membrane protein; and a third, outer membrane component. Since the three S. marcescens components of the HasA transporter have not yet been identified, the reconstituted HasA secretion system is a hybrid. It consists of the two S. marcescens inner membrane-specific components, HasD and HasE, associated with an outer membrane component coming from another bacterial ABC transporter, such as the E. coli TolC protein, the outer membrane component of the hemolysin transporter, or the Erwinia chrysanthemi PrtF protein, the outer membrane component of the protease transporter. This hybrid transporter was first shown to allow the secretion of the S. marcescens metalloprotease and the E. chrysanthemi metalloproteases B and C. On account of that, the two S. marcescens components HasD and HasE were previously named PrtDSM and PrtESM, respectively. However, HasA is secreted neither by the PrtD-PrtE-PrtF transporter (the genuine E. chrysanthemi protease transporter) nor by the HlyB-HlhD-TolC transporter (the hemolysin transporter). Moreover, HasA, coexpressed in the same cell, strongly inhibits the secretion of proteases B and C by their own transporter, indicating that the E. chrysanthemi transporter recognizes HasA. Since PrtF could replace TolC in the constitution of the HasA transporter, this indicates that the secretion block does not take place at the level of the outer membrane component but rather at an earlier step of interaction between HasA and the inner membrane components.  相似文献   

2.
Secretion of the HasA hemophore is mediated by a C-terminal secretion signal as part of an ATP-binding cassette (ABC) pathway in the Gram-negative bacterium Serratia marcescens. We reconstituted the HasA secretion pathway in Escherichia coli. In E. coli, this pathway required three specific secretion functions and SecB, the general chaperone of the Sec pathway that recognizes HasA. The secretion of the isolated C-terminal secretion signal was not SecB-dependent. We have previously shown that intracellular folded HasA can no longer be secreted, and we proposed a step in the secretion process before the recognition of the secretion signal. Here we show that the secretion of a fully functional HasA variant, lacking the first 10 N-terminal amino acids, was less efficient than that of HasA and was SecB-independent. The N terminus of HasA was required, along with SecB, for the efficient secretion of the whole protein. We have also previously shown that HasA inhibits the secretion of metalloproteases from Erwinia chrysanthemi by their specific ABC transporter. Here we show that this abortive interaction between HasA and the E. chrysanthemi metalloprotease ABC transporter required both SecB and the N terminus of HasA. N-terminal fragments of HasA displayed this abortive interaction in vivo and also interacted specifically in vitro with the ABC protein of the Prt system. SecB also interacted specifically in vitro with the ABC protein of the Prt system. Finally, the HasA variant, lacking the first 10 N-terminal amino acids did not display this abortive interaction with the Prt system. We suggest that the N-terminal domain of HasA specifically recognizes the ABC protein in a SecB-dependent fashion, facilitating functional interaction with the C-terminal secretion signal leading to efficient secretion.  相似文献   

3.
One of the strategies used by Gram-negative bacteria to secrete proteins across the two membranes which delimit the cells, issec independent and dedicated to proteins lacking an N-terminal signal peptide. It depends on ABC protein-mediated exporters, which consist of three cell envelope proteins: two inner membrane proteins: an ATPase (the ABC protein), a membrane fusion protein (MFP) and an outer membrane polypeptide.Erwinia chrysanthemi metalloproteinases B and C, andSerratia marcescens hemoprotein HasA are secreted by such homologous pathways and interact with the ABC protein. Interaction between the ABC protein and its substrate has also been evidenced by studies on proteinase and HasA hybrid transporters obtained by combining components from each system. Association between hemoprotein HasA and the three exporter/secretion proteins was demonstrated by affinity chromatography on hemin agarose on which the substrate remained bound with the three secretion proteins. The three component association was ordered and substrate binding was required for the formation of this multiprotein complex. Presented at the SymposiumRegulatory Aspects of Bacterial Cell Biology, Prague, October 16–17, 1996.  相似文献   

4.
The secretion pathways of the heme-binding protein HasA from Serratia marcescens and of the metalloproteases A, B, C and G from Erwinia chrysanthemi have been reconstituted in Escherichia coli. They are secreted in a single step from the cytoplasm across both membranes of the Gram-negative envelope, after recognition of their specific C-terminal secretion signal by their cognate ABC transporter. We report strong evidence that both HasA and the metalloproteases bind the SecB chaperone involved in the export of several envelope proteins via the Sec pathway. We also show that the secretion of the HasA protein is strongly dependent upon SecB in the reconstituted system, whereas that of the proteases is not. HasA secretion in the original host is strongly inhibited by a protein known to interfere with E.coli SecB function. We propose that the proteins secreted by the ABC pathway may have to be unfolded for efficient secretion.  相似文献   

5.
The Serratia marcescens metalloprotease (protease SM) belongs to a family of proteins secreted from gram-negative bacteria by a signal peptide-independent pathway which requires a specific transporter consisting of three proteins: two in the inner membrane and one in the outer membrane. The prtDSM and prtESM genes encoding the two S. marcescens inner membrane components were cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. Their nucleotide sequence revealed high overall homology with the two analogous inner membrane components of the Erwinia chrysanthemi protease secretion apparatus and lower, but still significant, homology with the two analogous inner membrane components of the E. coli hemolysin transporter. When expressed in E. coli, these two proteins, PrtDSM and PrtESM, allowed the secretion of protease SM only in the presence of TolC protein, the outer membrane component of the hemolysin transporter.  相似文献   

6.
TonB is a cytoplasmic membrane protein required for active transport of various essential substrates such as heme and iron siderophores through the outer membrane receptors of Gram-negative bacteria. This protein spans the periplasm, contacts outer membrane transporters by its C-terminal domain, and transduces energy from the protonmotive force to the transporters. The TonB box, a relatively conserved sequence localized on the periplasmic side of the transporters, has been shown to directly contact TonB.While Serratia marcescens TonB functions with various transporters, HasB, a TonB-like protein, is dedicated to the HasR transporter. HasR acquires heme either freely or via an extracellular heme carrier, the hemophore HasA, that binds to HasR and delivers heme to the transporter. Here, we study the interaction of HasR with a HasB C-terminal domain and compare it with that obtained with a TonB C-terminal fragment. Analysis of the thermodynamic parameters reveals that the interaction mode of HasR with HasB differs from that with TonB, the difference explaining the functional specificity of HasB for HasR. We also demonstrate that the presence of the substrate on the extracellular face of the transporter modifies, via enthalpy-entropy compensation, the interaction with HasB on the periplasmic face. The transmitted signal depends on the nature of the substrate. While the presence of heme on the transporter modifies only slightly the nature of interactions involved between HasR and HasB, hemophore binding on the transporter dramatically changes the interactions and seems to locally stabilize some structural motifs. In both cases, the HasR TonB box is the target for those modifications.  相似文献   

7.
HasA is a haem-binding protein which is secreted under iron-deficiency conditions by the gram-negative bacterium Serratia marcescens. It is a monomer of 19 kDa (187 residues) able to bind free haem as well as to capture it from haemoglobin. HasA delivers haem to a specific outer-membrane receptor HasR and allows the bacteria to grow in the absence of any other source of iron. It is secreted by a signal peptide-independent pathway which involves a C-terminal secretion signal and an ABC (ATP-binding cassette) transporter. The C-terminal region of the secretion signal containing the essential secretion motif is cleaved during or after the secretion process by proteases secreted by the bacteria. In this work, we study by 1H NMR the conformation of the C-terminal extremity of HasA in the whole protein and that of the isolated secretion signal peptide in a zwitterionic micelle complex that mimicks the membrane environment. We identify a helical region followed by a random-coil C-terminus in the peptide-micelle complex and we show that in both the whole protein and the complex, the last 15 residues containing the motif essential for secretion are highly flexible and unstructured. This flexibility may be a prerequisite to the recognition of HasA by its ABC transporter. We determine the cleavage site of the C-terminal extremity of the protein and analyse the effect of the cleavage on the haem acquisition process.  相似文献   

8.
One of the strategies used by Gram-negative bacteria to secrete proteins across the two membranes which delimit the cells, is sec independent and dedicated to proteins lacking an N-terminal signal peptide. It depends on ABC protein-mediated exporters, which consist of three cell envelope proteins, two inner membrane proteins, an ATPase (the ABC protein), a membrane fusion protein (MFP) and an outer membrane polypeptide. Erwinia chrysanthemi metalloproteases B and C and Serratia marcescens hemoprotein HasA are secreted by such homologous pathways and interact with the ABC protein. Using as protein substrates HasA and GST-PrtC, a chimeric protein which has a glutathione S-transferase moiety fused to a large C-terminal domain of protease C, we developed a simple system to identify proteins bound to the substrate based on substrate affinity-chromatography using heme- or glutathione-agarose. We show an ordered association between the protein substrates and the three exporter components: the substrate recognizes the ABC protein which interacts with the MFP which in turn binds the outer membrane component. Substrate binding is required for assembly of the three components.  相似文献   

9.
The Serratia marcescens haemophore HasA is secreted by an ABC exporter comprising three envelope proteins. The ABC protein (ATP-binding cassette) HasD and the MFP protein (membrane fusion protein) HasE but not the outer membrane component have been isolated previously. In Escherichia coli , TolC, the outer membrane component of the haemolysin transporter, can form a hybrid exporter with HasD and HasE. This hybrid secretes HasA and the very similar metalloproteases from S. marcescens and Erwinia chrysanthemi . By analogy, the genuine exporter was predicted to secrete metalloproteases. The hasF gene was thus cloned from S. marcescens into an E. coli tolC mutant carrying hasD and hasE genes, by screening for a proteolytic phenotype on skimmed-milk plates. hasF encodes a protein sharing 74% identity with the E. coli TolC protein. Anti-TolC antibodies cross-reacted with a protein with an apparent molecular weight of 53 kDa in E. coli expressing hasF and in S. marcescens . hasF is unlinked to the has cluster and, unlike the has operon, is not iron regulated. hasF complements some of the tolC phenotypes, including drug- and detergent sensitivities and haemolysin secretion but not colicin E1 uptake. This suggests that the various functions of TolC could correspond to distinct domains on the protein.  相似文献   

10.
The major mechanism by which bacteria acquire free or haemoglobin-bound haem involves direct binding to specific outer membrane receptors. Serratia marcescens also secretes a haem-binding protein, HasA, which functions as a haemophore that catches haem and shuttles it to a cell surface specific outer membrane receptor, HasR. We report the isolation and characterization of hasAp , a gene from Pseudomonas aeruginosa. HasAp is an iron-regulated extracellular haem-binding protein that shares about 50% identity with HasA. HasAp is required for P. aeruginosa utilization of haemoglobin iron. It can replace HasA for HasR-dependent haemoblobin acquisition in a system reconstituted in Escherichia coli. HasAp, like HasA, lacks a signal peptide and is secreted by an ABC transporter. These findings show that haemophore-dependent haem acquisition is not unique to S. marcescens .  相似文献   

11.
Protein secretion through autotransporter and two-partner pathways   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Two distinct protein secretion pathways, the autotransporter (AT) and the two-partner secretion (TPS) pathways are characterized by their apparent simplicity. Both are devoted to the translocation across the outer membrane of mostly large proteins or protein domains. As implied by their name, AT proteins contain their own transporter domain, covalently attached to the C-terminal extremity of the secreted passenger domain, while TPS systems are composed of two separate proteins, with TpsA being the secreted protein and TpsB its specific transporter. In both pathways, the secreted proteins are exported in a Sec-dependent manner across the inner membrane, after which they cross the outer membrane with the help of their cognate transporters. The AT translocator domains and the TpsB proteins constitute distinct families of protein-translocating, outer membrane porins of Gram-negative bacteria. Both types of transporters insert into the outer membrane as beta-barrel proteins possibly forming oligomeric pores in the case of AT and serve as conduits for their cognate secreted proteins or domains across the outer membrane. Translocation appears to be folding-sensitive in both pathways, indicating that AT passenger domains and TpsA proteins cross the periplasm and the outer membrane in non-native conformations and fold progressively at the cell surface. A major difference between AT and TPS pathways arises from the manner by which specificity is established between the secreted protein and its transporter. In AT, the covalent link between the passenger and the translocator domains ensures the translocation of the former without the need for a specific molecular recognition between the two modules. In contrast, the TPS pathway has solved the question of specific recognition between the TpsA proteins and their transporters by the addition to the TpsA proteins of an N-proximal module, the conserved TPS domain, which represents a hallmark of the TPS pathway.  相似文献   

12.
HasA is the secreted hemophore of the heme acquisition system (Has) of Serratia marcescens. It is secreted by a specific ABC transporter apparatus composed of three proteins: HasD, an inner membrane ABC protein; HasE, another inner membrane protein; and HasF, a TolC homolog. Except for HasF, the structural genes of the Has system are encoded by an iron-regulated operon. In previous studies, this secretion system has been reconstituted in Escherichia coli, where it requires the presence of the SecB chaperone, the Sec pathway-dedicated chaperone. We cloned and inactivated the secB gene from S. marcescens. We show that S. marcescens SecB is 93% identical to E. coli SecB and complements the secretion defects of a secB mutant of E. coli for both the Sec and ABC pathways of HasA secretion. In S. marcescens, SecB inactivation affects translocation by the Sec pathway and abolishes HasA secretion. This demonstrates that S. marcescens SecB is the genuine chaperone for HasA secretion in S. marcescens. These results also demonstrate that S. marcescens SecB is bifunctional, as it is involved in two separate secretion pathways. We investigated the effects of secB point mutations in the reconstituted HasA secretion pathway by comparing the translocation of a Sec substrate in various mutants. Two different patterns of SecB residue effects were observed, suggesting that SecB functions may differ for the Sec and ABC pathways.  相似文献   

13.
Hemophores are secreted by several gram-negative bacteria (Serratia marcescens, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Pseudomonas fluorescens, and Yersinia pestis) and form a family of homologous proteins. Unlike the S. marcescens hemophore (HasA(SM)), the P. fluorescens hemophore HasA(PF) has an additional region of 12 residues located immediately upstream from the C-terminal secretion signal. We show that HasA(PF) undergoes a C-terminal cleavage which removes the last 21 residues when secreted from P. fluorescens and that only the processed form is able to deliver heme to the S. marcescens outer membrane hemophore-specific receptor, HasR(SM). Functional analysis of variants including those with an internal deletion of the extra C-terminal domain show that the secretion signal does not inhibit the biological activity, whereas the 12-amino-acid region located upstream does. This extra domain may inhibit the interaction of the hemophore with HasR(SM). To localize the hemophore regions involved in binding to HasR, chimeric HasA(PF)-HasA(SM) proteins were tested for biological activity. We show that residues 153 to 180 of HasA(PF) are necessary for its interaction with the receptor.  相似文献   

14.
The LamB-LacZ-PhoA tripartite fusion protein is secreted to the periplasm, where it exerts a toxicity of unknown origin during high-level synthesis in the presence of the inducer maltose, a phenotype referred to as maltose sensitivity. We selected multicopy suppressors of this toxicity that allow growth of the tripartite fusion strains in the presence of maltose. Mapping and subclone analysis of the suppressor locus identified a previously uncharacterized chromosomal region at 4.7 min that is responsible for suppression. DNA sequence analysis revealed a new gene with the potential to code for a protein of 236 amino acids with a predicted molecular mass of 25,829 Da. The gene product contains an amino-terminal signal sequence to direct the protein for secretion and a consensus lipoprotein modification sequence. As predicted from the sequence, the suppressor protein is labeled with [3H]palmitate and is localized to the outer membrane. Accordingly, the gene has been named nlpE (for new lipoprotein E). Increased expression of NlpE suppresses the maltose sensitivity of tripartite fusion strains and also the extracytoplasmic toxicities conferred by a mutant outer membrane protein, LamBA23D. Suppression occurs by activation of the Cpx two-component signal transduction pathway. This pathway controls the expression of the periplasmic protease DegP and other factors that can combat certain types of extracytoplasmic stress.  相似文献   

15.
Serratia marcescens ATP-binding cassette (ABC) exporter, the Lip system, secretes lipase (LipA(SM)), metalloproteases, and a cell surface layer protein homologue but not a heme acquisition protein, HasA (HasA(SM)). Secretion of HasA(SM) is limited to the Has(SM) system. However, HasA proteins from Pseudomonas fluorescens (HasA(PF)) and Pseudomonas aeruginosa were exported through the Lip and Has(SM) systems. To investigate the specificity in Lip exporter-mediated secretion, secretion analysis was performed using chimeras containing the HasA(PF) and HasA(SM) sequences. The segment Val-Ala-Leu (designated R1 to R3 sites), which is present close to the C terminus of HasA(PF) but not HasA(SM), was revealed to be involved in the substrate specificity of the Lip exporter. Introduction of amino acid substitutions into the R1-R5 region demonstrated that R1, R3, R4, and R5 sites require some specific amino acid residues for Lip-mediated secretion. The amino acid sequence of the region was conserved considerably among the proteins secreted by the Lip exporter. On the contrary, the region was not related to HasA secretion through the Has(SM) system. Interestingly, a typical C-terminal motif, so far regarded as a secretion signal, was not necessary for secretion through either the Lip or the Has(SM) exporter. In LipA(SM) secretion via the Lip system, the typical C-terminal motif was not essential either, but the presence of a sequence similar to Val-Ala-Leu and its location from the C terminus greatly affect the secretion level. Secretion analyses using hybrid exporters and competitors exhibited that the R1-R5 region was recognized by an ABC protein of the Lip exporter, LipB, and that the mutations aborting Lip-mediated secretion in the region resulted in a loss of the affinity to LipB. Thus, a determinant within the secretory protein for Lip-mediated secretion was fully defined.  相似文献   

16.
The secretion signal of extracellular metalloprotease B that is secreted without a signal peptide by the Gram-negative phytopathogenic bacterium Erwinia chrysanthemi is shown by deletion and gene fusion analyses to be located within the last 40 C-terminal amino acids. Secretion of a peptide containing only this region of the protease requires the same three secretion factors (PrtD, PrtE, and PrtF) that were previously shown to be required for the secretion of the full-length protease. This secretion signal can also be recognized, albeit inefficiently, by the analogous secretion machinery of alpha-hemolysin, another protein with a C-terminal secretion signal that is secreted by some strains of the Gram-negative bacterium Escherichia coli. The secretion signal was fused to an internal 200-amino acid fragment from the sequence of the cytoplasmic protein amylomaltase to promote its specific secretion by the protease secretion pathway. Almost exactly the same sequence as that identified as the protease B secretion signal was also found at the C terminus of metalloprotease C that is also secreted by E. chrysanthemi.  相似文献   

17.
A collection of large virulence exoproteins, including Ca2+-independent cytolysins, an iron acquisition protein and several adhesins, are secreted by the two-partner secretion (TPS) pathway in various Gram-negative bacteria. The hallmarks of the TPS pathway are the presence of an N-proximal module called the 'secretion domain' in the exoproteins that we have named the TpsA family, and the channel-forming beta-barrel transporter proteins we refer to as the TpsB family. The genes for cognate exoprotein and transporter protein are usually organized in an operon. Specific secretion signals are present in a highly conserved region of the secretion domain of TpsAs. TpsBs probably serve as specific receptors of the TpsA secretion signals and as channels for the translocation of the exoproteins across the outer membrane. A subfamily of transporters also mediates activation of their cognate cytolysins upon secretion. The exoproteins are synthesized as precursors with an N-terminal cleavable signal peptide, and a subset of them carries an extended signal peptide of unknown function. According to our current model, the exoproteins are probably translocated across the cytoplasmic membrane in a Sec-dependent fashion, and their signal peptide is probably processed by a LepB-type signal peptidase. The N-proximal secretion domain directs the exoproteins towards their transporters early, so that translocation across both membranes is coupled. The exoproteins transit through the periplasm in an extended conformation and fold progressively at the cell surface before eventually being released into the extracellular milieu. Several adhesins also undergo extensive proteolytic processing upon secretion. The genes of many new TpsAs and TpsBs are found in recently sequenced genomes, suggesting that the TPS pathway is widespread.  相似文献   

18.
Two ATP-binding cassette (ABC) exporters are present in Pseudomonas fluorescens no. 33; one is the recently reported AprDEF system and the other is HasDEF, which exports a heme acquisition protein, HasA. The hasDEF genes were cloned by DNA hybridization with a DNA probe coding for the LipB protein, one of the components of the Serratia marcescens ABC exporter Lip system. P. fluorescens HasA showed sequence identity of 40 to 49% with HasA proteins from Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Serratia marcescens. The P. fluorescens Has exporter secreted HasA proteins from P. fluorescens and P. aeruginosa but not S. marcescens HasA in Escherichia coli, whereas the Has exporter from S. marcescens allowed secretion of all three HasA proteins. The P. fluorescens HasDEF system also promoted the secretion of the lipase and alkaline protease of P. fluorescens. Hybrid exporter analysis demonstrated that the HasD proteins, which are ABC proteins, are involved in the discrimination of export substrates. Chimeric HasA proteins containing both P. fluorescens and S. marcescens sequences were produced and tested for secretion through the Has exporters. The C-terminal region of HasA was shown to be involved in the secretion specificity of the P. fluorescens Has exporter.  相似文献   

19.
革兰氏阴性菌血红素载体蛋白Hemophore的结构及作用机制   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
血红素作为宿主体内最丰富的铁离子来源,是致病菌营养竞争的主要目标,尤其对于血红素自身合成途径部分丧失的细菌。革兰氏阴性菌血红素转运系统由血红素载体蛋白(Hemophore)、外膜血红素受体、TonB-ExbB-ExbD复合物、ABC转运体等组成。Hemophore是存在于细菌细胞膜上或分泌到胞外环境中的一种蛋白。它能从宿主血红素结合蛋白中捕获血红素并将其传递给外膜受体。目前,在不同革兰氏阴性菌中已发现3种类型的Hemophore,分别是HasA、HxuA和HmuY型。本文将详细描述这3种Hemophore捕获血红素及与外膜受体相互作用的机制,以期为进一步研究其他细菌血红素载体蛋白的功能及作用机制奠定基础。  相似文献   

20.
Gram-negative bacterial proteins secreted by ABC exporters carry a secretion signal in their carboxylic extremities. This characteristic suggests that the polypeptide needs to be fully synthesized before it can be secreted and, therefore, presumably may fold at least in part before its secretion. We investigated the relationship between folding and secretion using HasA, a hemoprotein of Serratia marcescens secreted into the extracellular medium by a dedicated Has ABC exporter. We first demonstrated that when HasA is sequestered in the cytoplasm it can acquire its tertiary structure, as assessed from its capacity to bind heme. The cytoplasmic pool of HasA cannot be secreted and inhibits the secretion of newly synthesized molecules. HasA folding in the cytoplasm was independent of either its capacity to bind heme or the presence of SecB, although SecB is essential for HasA secretion. Our findings indicate a strong coupling between synthesis and secretion in the type I secretion pathway.  相似文献   

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