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Electrostatic Switching Controls Channel Dynamics of the Sensor Protein VirB10 in A. tumefaciens Type IV Secretion System
Author(s) -
Vidya C. Darbari,
Jonah Ciccone,
Jagdish Suresh Patel,
Barira Islam,
Pratul K. Agarwal,
Shozeb Haider
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
acs omega
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.779
H-Index - 40
ISSN - 2470-1343
DOI - 10.1021/acsomega.9b03313
Subject(s) - secretion , agrobacterium tumefaciens , biogenesis , pilus , microbiology and biotechnology , gating , effector , biophysics , mutant , biology , biochemistry , transformation (genetics) , escherichia coli , gene
Type IV secretion systems are large nanomachines assembled across the bacterial cell envelope for effector translocation and conjugation. VirB10 traverses the inner and outer membranes, sensing cellular signals for coordinating the conformational switch for pilus biogenesis and/or secretion. Mutations uncoupling secretion from pilus biogenesis were identified in Agrobacterium tumefaciens VirB10 including a gating defect mutation G272R that made VirB10 unresponsive to intracellular ATP, causing unregulated secretion of VirE2 in a contact-independent manner. Comparative long-timescale molecular dynamics of the wild type and G272R mutant of the A. tumefaciens VirB10 CTD tetradecamer reveals how the G272R mutation locks the oligomer in a rigid conformation by swapping the ionic interactions between the loops from the β-barrel close to the inner leaflet of the outer membrane. This electrostatic switching changes the allosteric communication pathway from the extracellular loop to the base of the barrel, suggesting that the local conformational dynamics in the loops can gate information across VirB10.

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