Abstract

BackgroundGram-negative bacteria have developed a limited repertoire of solutions for secreting proteins from the cytoplasmic compartment to the exterior of the cell. Amongst the spectrum of secreted proteins are the intimins and invasins (the Int/Inv family; TC# 1.B.54) which are characterized by an N-terminal β-barrel domain and a C-terminal surface localized passenger domain. Despite the important role played by members of this family in diseases mediated by several species of the Enterobacteriaceae, there has been little appreciation for the distribution and diversity of these proteins amongst Gram-negative bacteria. Furthermore, there is little understanding of the molecular events governing secretion of these proteins to the extracellular milieu.Principal Findings In silico approaches were used to analyze the domain organization and diversity of members of this secretion family. Proteins belonging to this family are predominantly associated with organisms from the γ-proteobacteria. Whilst proteins from the Chlamydia, γ-, β- and ε-proteobacteria possess β-barrel domains and passenger domains of various sizes, Int/Inv proteins from the α-proteobacteria, cyanobacteria and chlorobi possess only the predicted β-barrel domains. Phylogenetic analyses revealed that with few exceptions these proteins cluster according to organismal type, indicating that divergence occurred contemporaneously with speciation, and that horizontal transfer was limited. Clustering patterns of the β-barrel domains correlate well with those of the full-length proteins although the passenger domains do so with much less consistency. The modular subdomain design of the passenger domains suggests that subdomain duplication and deletion have occurred with high frequency over evolutionary time. However, all repeated subdomains are found in tandem, suggesting that subdomain shuffling occurred rarely if at all. Topological predictions for the β-barrel domains are presented.ConclusionBased on our in silico analyses we present a model for the biogenesis of these proteins. This study is the first of its kind to describe this unusual family of bacterial adhesins.

Highlights

  • Pathogenic Gram-negative bacteria have developed many distinct secretion mechanisms for the efficient surface display of binding domains that interact with their complementary receptors on host cell surfaces [1,2]

  • This intimate adherence to host cells is mediated by interaction of Intimin with Tir, a protein secreted directly from the bacterial cytoplasm into the host cell membrane via a type III protein secretion system, and which results in host cell actin reorganization. [6,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18]

  • As the bbarrel is deemed essential for secretion and a requisite feature of Int/Inv family members, all proteins lacking this domain were eliminated from further analyses

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Summary

Introduction

Pathogenic Gram-negative bacteria have developed many distinct secretion mechanisms for the efficient surface display of binding domains that interact with their complementary receptors on host cell surfaces [1,2]. The Intimin/Invasin (Int/ Inv) family of adhesins (TC# 1.B.54) consists of outer membrane (OM) proteins that mediate bacterial attachment to and/or invasion of their host cells [3,4,5,6,7]. First described by Jerse et al in enteropathogenic and E. coli strains, promote intimate bacterial attachment associated with attaching-effacing lesion formation in the gut mucosa [8,9]. This intimate adherence to host cells is mediated by interaction of Intimin with Tir, a protein secreted directly from the bacterial cytoplasm into the host cell membrane via a type III protein secretion system, and which results in host cell actin reorganization. There is little understanding of the molecular events governing secretion of these proteins to the extracellular milieu

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