Abstract

The PEB4 protein is an antigenic virulence factor implicated in host cell adhesion, invasion, and colonization in the food-borne pathogen Campylobacter jejuni. peb4 mutants have defects in outer membrane protein assembly and PEB4 is thought to act as a periplasmic chaperone. The crystallographic structure of PEB4 at 2.2-Å resolution reveals a dimer with distinct SurA-like chaperone and peptidyl-prolyl cis/trans isomerase (PPIase) domains encasing a large central cavity. Unlike SurA, the chaperone domain is formed by interlocking helices from each monomer, creating a domain-swapped architecture. PEB4 stimulated the rate of proline isomerization limited refolding of denatured RNase T(1) in a juglone-sensitive manner, consistent with parvulin-like PPIase domains. Refolding and aggregation of denatured rhodanese was significantly retarded in the presence of PEB4 or of an engineered variant specifically lacking the PPIase domain, suggesting the chaperone domain possesses a holdase activity. Using bioinformatics approaches, we identified two other SurA-like proteins (Cj1289 and Cj0694) in C. jejuni. The 2.3-Å structure of Cj1289 does not have the domain-swapped architecture of PEB4 and thus more resembles SurA. Purified Cj1289 also enhanced RNase T(1) refolding, although poorly compared with PEB4, but did not retard the refolding of denatured rhodanese. Structurally, Cj1289 is the most similar protein to SurA in C. jejuni, whereas PEB4 has most structural similarity to the Par27 protein of Bordetella pertussis. Our analysis predicts that Cj0694 is equivalent to the membrane-anchored chaperone PpiD. These results provide the first structural insights into the periplasmic assembly of outer membrane proteins in C. jejuni.

Highlights

  • 21254 JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY ones bind proteins emerging from the Sec system in an unfolded or partially folded state and present them to a specialized insertion system5 in the outer membrane [1, 2]

  • The C. jejuni Genome Encodes Three Periplasmic Proteins Related to SurA—To test whether C. jejuni possesses any members of the SurA superfamily that might be involved in the OMP assembly pathway in addition to PEB4, we scanned the Pfam SurA_N HMM (PF09312.4; Pfam release 24.0) against the C. jejuni NCTC11168 predicted translated ORFs (1643 sequences) using HMMSEARCH from the HMMER3 package [53]

  • In this work we have begun to elucidate the basis for OMP assembly in C. jejuni by determination of the structure and activity of two periplasmic chaperones that have folds similar to the well characterized E. coli SurA protein

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Summary

Introduction

21254 JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY ones bind proteins emerging from the Sec system in an unfolded or partially folded state and present them to a specialized insertion system (the ␤-barrel assembly machinery complex or BAM)5 in the outer membrane [1, 2]. The region of predicted structural similarity with PEB4 included substantial portions of the SurA chaperone domain.

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