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An Extracellular Loop of the Mannose Phosphotransferase System Component IIC Is Responsible for Specific Targeting by Class IIa Bacteriocins
Authors:Morten Kjos  Zhian Salehian  Ingolf F Nes  Dzung B Diep
Institution:Laboratory of Microbial Gene Technology and Food Microbiology, Department of Chemistry, Biotechnology and Food Science, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, N-1432 Ås, Norway
Abstract:Class IIa bacteriocins target a phylogenetically defined subgroup of mannose-phosphotransferase systems (man-PTS) on sensitive cells. By the use of man-PTS genes of the sensitive Listeria monocytogenes (mpt) and the nonsensitive Lactococcus lactis (ptn) species to rationally design a series of man-PTS chimeras and site-directed mutations, we identified an extracellular loop of the membrane-located protein MptC that was responsible for specific target recognition by the class IIa bacteriocins.Bacteriocins are small, ribosomally synthesized antimicrobial peptides that normally kill bacteria closely related to the bacteriocin producers, but some also target a wider spectrum of bacteria, including a number of pathogens and food spoilage bacterial species (5, 28). Class IIa (pediocin-like) bacteriocins display a broad antimicrobial spectrum, including important pathogens such as Listeria monocytogenes and Enterococcus faecalis. These peptides consist of 37 to 48 nonmodified amino acids, contain a conserved pediocin-box sequence (Y-G-N-G-V/L) in the N-terminal region, and have defined secondary features in their structure: a cationic β sheet at the conserved N terminus and a helix-containing domain at the less-conserved C terminus (16, 30). Class IIa bacteriocins target sensitive cells by using the mannose phosphotransferase system (man-PTS) as a receptor (6, 10, 17, 19, 33). This sugar uptake system is the major glucose transporter for many bacteria, particularly Firmicutes and Gammaproteobacteria (39). Each man-PTS complex consists of four structural domains: IIC and IID, represented by two membrane-located proteins, and IIA and IIB, which are normally represented by a single cytoplasmic protein that can form reversible contacts with its membrane-located partners (31).It has previously been shown that coexpression of the IIC and IID genes is needed to confer sensitivity to class IIa bacteriocins as well as to the lactococcal bacteriocin lactococcin A and that the cytoplasmic IIAB partner is not involved in this process (10). However, while lactococcin A (belonging to class IIc) targets only the lactococcal man-PTS, the class IIa bacteriocins target man-PTSs of species of diverse genera (e.g., Listeria, Enterococcus, and Lactobacillus) but somehow not those of the Lactococcus genus (24). This genus specificity has been recognized for almost 2 decades (20, 23, 26); still, the molecular nature underlying the specificity has remained very enigmatic. In the present report we clarify this issue by demonstrating that these two types of bacteriocins exhibit different binding patterns on their receptors: class IIa bacteriocins specifically interact with a defined region of 40 amino acids in the IIC protein whereas lactococcin A has a more complex interaction involving regions from both IIC and IID.
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