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Shigella IpaD has a dual role: signal transduction from the type III secretion system needle tip and intracellular secretion regulation
Authors:A Dorothea Roehrich  Enora Guillossou  Ariel J Blocker  Isabel Martinez‐Argudo
Institution:1. School of Cellular & Molecular Medicine, University of Bristol, , Bristol, BS8?1TD UK;2. School of Biochemistry, University of Bristol, , Bristol, BS8?1TD UK
Abstract:Type III secretion systems (T3SSs) are protein injection devices essential for the interaction of many Gram‐negative bacteria with eukaryotic cells. While Shigella assembles its T3SS when the environmental conditions are appropriate for invasion, secretion is only activated after physical contact with a host cell. First, the translocators are secreted to form a pore in the host cell membrane, followed by effectors which manipulate the host cell. Secretion activation is tightly controlled by conserved T3SS components: the needle tip proteins IpaD and IpaB, the needle itself and the intracellular gatekeeper protein MxiC. To further characterize the role of IpaD during activation, we combined random mutagenesis with a genetic screen to identify ipaD mutant strains unable to respond to host cell contact. Class II mutants have an overall defect in secretion induction. They map to IpaD's C‐terminal helix and likely affect activation signal generation or transmission. The Class I mutant secretes translocators prematurely and is specifically defective in IpaD secretion upon activation. A phenotypically equivalent mutant was found in mxiC. We show that IpaD and MxiC act in the same intracellular pathway. In summary, we demonstrate that IpaD has a dual role and acts at two distinct locations during secretion activation.
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