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Discovery of Ubiquitin Deamidases in the Pathogenic Arsenal of Legionella pneumophila
Author(s) -
Dylan Valleau,
Andrew T. Quaile,
Hong Cui,
Xiaohui Xu,
E. Evdokimova,
Changsoo Chang,
M.E. Cuff,
Malene L. Urbanus,
Scott Houliston,
C.H. Arrowsmith,
Alexander W. Ensminger,
Alexei Savchenko
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
cell reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.264
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 2639-1856
pISSN - 2211-1247
DOI - 10.1016/j.celrep.2018.03.060
Subject(s) - legionella pneumophila , effector , ubiquitin , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , gene , pathogenic bacteria , bacteria , genetics
Legionella pneumophila translocates the largest known arsenal of over 330 pathogenic factors, called "effectors," into host cells during infection, enabling L. pneumophila to establish a replicative niche inside diverse amebas and human macrophages. Here, we reveal that the L. pneumophila effectors MavC (Lpg2147) and MvcA (Lpg2148) are structural homologs of cycle inhibiting factor (Cif) effectors and that the adjacent gene, lpg2149, produces a protein that directly inhibits their activity. In contrast to canonical Cifs, both MavC and MvcA contain an insertion domain and deamidate the residue Gln40 of ubiquitin but not Gln40 of NEDD8. MavC and MvcA are functionally diverse, with only MavC interacting with the human E2-conjugating enzyme UBE2N (Ubc13). MavC deamidates the UBE2N∼Ub conjugate, disrupting Lys63 ubiquitination and dampening NF-κB signaling. Combined, our data reveal a molecular mechanism of host manipulation by pathogenic bacteria and highlight the complex regulatory mechanisms integral to L. pneumophila's pathogenic strategy.

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