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The Helicobacter pylori Protein CagM is Located in the Transmembrane Channel That is Required for CagA Translocation
Authors:Feng Ling  Xiaochun Wang  DongFang Dai  Min Yu  Cheng Chen  Jingyi Qian  Chang Liu  Yuanyuan Zhang  Jie Ding  Xian Wei Guan  Shihe Shao
Institution:1. School of Medical Science and Laboratory Medicine, Jiangsu University, Zhenjiang, 212013, Jiangsu, China
2. Department of Clinical Laboratory, Kunshan Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine Affiliated to Nanjing University of Chinese Medicine, Kunshan, 215300, Jiangsu, China
3. Affiliated Hospital of Jiangsu University, Zhenjiang, 212001, Jiangsu, China
Abstract:Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) is a human gastric pathogen that colonizes the stomach in more than 50 % of the world’s human population. Infection with this bacterium can induce several gastric diseases ranging from gastritis to peptic ulcer and gastric cancer. Virulent H. pylori isolates harboring the cag pathogenicity island (cag PAI), which encodes a Type IV Secretion System (T4SS), form a pilus for the injection of its major virulence protein CagA into gastric cells. Several cag PAI genes have been identified as homologues of T4SS genes from Agrobacterium tumefaciens, while the other members in cag PAI still have no known function. We studied one of such proteins with unknown function, CagM, which was predicted to have a putative N-terminal signal sequence and at least three transmembrane helices. To determine the subcellular localization of CagM, we performed a cell fractionation procedure and produced rabbit anti-CagM polyclonal antibodies for immunoblotting assays. Furthermore, we generated an isogenic ΔcagM mutant to investigate the ability of CagA translocation compared with the wild-type NCTC 11637 strain using GES-1 and MKN-45 cell infection experiments. Our results indicated that CagM was mainly located in the bacterial membrane, partially located in the periplasm, and essential for CagA translocation both in GES-1 and MKN-45 cells, which suggested that CagM was one of the core members of Cag T4SS and localized in the transmembrane channel.
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