Abstract

Helicobacter pylori colonizes about half of humans worldwide, and its presence in the gastric mucosa is associated with an increased risk of gastric adenocarcinoma, gastric lymphoma, and peptic ulcer disease. H. pylori strains carrying the cag pathogenicity island (cagPAI) are associated with increased risk of disease progression. The cagPAI encodes the Cag type IV secretion system (CagT4SS), which delivers the CagA oncoprotein and other effector molecules into human gastric epithelial cells. We visualized structures of native and mutant CagT4SS machines on the H. pylori cell envelope by cryoelectron tomography. Individual H. pylori cells contain multiple CagT4SS nanomachines, each composed of a wheel-shaped outer membrane complex (OMC) with 14-fold symmetry and an inner membrane complex (IMC) with 6-fold symmetry. CagX, CagY, and CagM are required for assembly of the OMC, whereas strains lacking Cag3 and CagT produce outer membrane complexes lacking peripheral components. The IMC, which has never been visualized in detail, is configured as six tiers in cross-section view and three concentric rings surrounding a central channel in end-on view. The IMC contains three T4SS ATPases: (i) VirB4-like CagE, arranged as a hexamer of dimers at the channel entrance; (ii) a hexamer of VirB11-like Cagα, docked at the base of the CagE hexamer; and (iii) VirD4-like Cagβ and other unspecified Cag subunits, associated with the stacked CagE/Cagα complex and forming the outermost rings. The CagT4SS and recently solved Legionella pneumophila Dot/Icm system comprise new structural prototypes for the T4SS superfamily.IMPORTANCE Bacterial type IV secretion systems (T4SSs) have been phylogenetically grouped into two subfamilies. The T4ASSs, represented by the Agrobacterium tumefaciens VirB/VirD4T4SS, include "minimized" machines assembled from 12 VirB- and VirD4-like subunits and compositionally larger systems such as the Helicobacter pylori CagT4SS T4BSSs encompass systems closely related in subunit composition to the Legionella pneumophila Dot/IcmT4SS Here, we present structures of native and mutant H. pylori Cag machines determined by in situ cryoelectron tomography. We identify distinct outer and inner membrane complexes and, for the first time, visualize structural contributions of all three "signature" ATPases of T4SSs at the cytoplasmic entrance of the translocation channel. Despite their evolutionary divergence, the CagT4SS aligns structurally much more closely to the Dot/IcmT4SS than an available VirB/VirD4 subcomplex. Our findings highlight the diversity of T4SSs and suggest a structural classification scheme in which T4SSs are grouped as minimized VirB/VirD4-like or larger Cag-like and Dot/Icm-like systems.

Highlights

  • Helicobacter pylori colonizes about half of humans worldwide, and its presence in the gastric mucosa is associated with an increased risk of gastric adenocarcinoma, gastric lymphoma, and peptic ulcer disease

  • In Gram-negative bacteria, “minimized” T4SSs classified as type IVA systems (T4ASSs) are assembled from 12 subunits, termed VirB1 through VirB11 and VirD4 according to a unifying nomenclature developed from the well-characterized Agrobacterium tumefaciens VirB/VirD4 system [5]

  • We visualized frozen-hydrated H. pylori cells by use of a direct electron detector and a high-throughput cryoelectron tomography (CryoET) protocol applied in our previous studies to solve the structures of the Dot/IcmT4SS, type III secretion systems (T3SSs), and flagellar basal bodies [17, 23,24,25]

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Summary

Introduction

Helicobacter pylori colonizes about half of humans worldwide, and its presence in the gastric mucosa is associated with an increased risk of gastric adenocarcinoma, gastric lymphoma, and peptic ulcer disease. In the T4BSSs, as many as 20 system-specific components in addition to Vir homologs or orthologs are required for machine assembly, as represented by the Legionella pneumophila Dot/Icm system [5] These types of evolutionary adaptations impart biological diversity and likely considerable structural variability to the members of the T4SS superfamily [4]. A nearly complete minimized T4ASS was successfully isolated and its structure was solved by single-particle EM This large (ϳ3-MDa) substructure, obtained from E. coli harboring the conjugative plasmid R388, consists of an OMC connected by a thin stalk to an inner membrane complex (IMC) [14]. Features of the IMC and central stalk leave unresolved the question of how T4SS substrates are translocated to the cell surface, significantly, the VirB3–10/VirD4 complex offered the first structural blueprint for a T4SS spanning the Gram-negative cell envelope

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