Abstract
Virulent strains of the bacterial pathogen Vibrio cholerae cause the diarrheal disease cholera by releasing cholera toxin into the small intestine. V. cholerae acquired its cholera toxin genes by lysogenic infection with the filamentous bacteriophage CTXφ. CTXφ uses its minor coat protein pIII, located in multiple copies at the phage tip, to bind to the V. cholerae toxin-coregulated pilus (TCP). However, the molecular details of this interaction and the mechanism of phage internalization are not well-understood. The TCP filament is a polymer of major pilins, TcpA, and one or more minor pilin, TcpB. TCP are retractile, with both retraction and assembly initiated by TcpB. Consistent with these roles in pilus dynamics, we hypothesized that TcpB controls both binding and internalization of CTXφ. To test this hypothesis, we determined the crystal structure of the C-terminal half of TcpB and characterized its interactions with CTXφ pIII. We show that TcpB is a homotrimer in its crystallographic form as well as in solution and is present in multiple copies at the pilus tip, which likely facilitates polyvalent binding to pIII proteins at the phage tip. We further show that recombinant forms of TcpB and pIII interact in vitro, and both TcpB and anti-TcpB antibodies block CTXφ infection of V. cholerae Finally, we show that CTXφ uptake requires TcpB-mediated retraction. Our data support a model whereby CTXφ and TCP bind in a tip-to-tip orientation, allowing the phage to be drawn into the V. cholerae periplasm as an extension of the pilus filament.
Highlights
Virulent strains of the bacterial pathogen Vibrio cholerae cause the diarrheal disease cholera by releasing cholera toxin into the small intestine
To understand how the V. cholerae minor pilin TcpB performs its dual functions in initiating both pilus assembly and retraction, we sought its crystal structure
Soluble protein was produced for both forms, and the TcpB-C structure was solved to 1.53-Å resolution (Table 1 and Fig. 1C)
Summary
The Vibrio cholerae minor pilin TcpB mediates uptake of the cholera toxin phage CTX. X Lisa Craig From the Molecular Biology and Biochemistry Department, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia V5A 1S6, Canada
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