Essential role of calcium in extending RTX adhesins to their target

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.yjsbx.2020.100036Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Elongated beta-sandwich repeats are a major part of bacterial RTX adhesins.

  • The repeats are arranged in tandem to extend away from the bacterial surface.

  • Calcium ions are coordinated in the linkers between repeats to stiffen the protein.

  • Rigidification of the tandem repeats further helps extension of the adhesin.

  • The repeats differ greatly between species, but all have Ca2+ in their linkers.

Abstract

RTX adhesins are long, multi-domain proteins present on the outer membrane of many Gram-negative bacteria. From this vantage point, adhesins use their distal ligand-binding domains for surface attachment leading to biofilm formation. To expand the reach of the ligand-binding domains, RTX adhesins maintain a central extender region of multiple tandem repeats, which makes up most of the proteins’ large molecular weight. Alignments of the 10-15-kDa extender domains show low sequence identity between adhesins. Here we have produced and structurally characterized protein constructs of four tandem repeats (tetra-tandemers) from two different RTX adhesins. In comparing the tetra-tandemers to each other and already solved structures from Marinomonas primoryensis and Salmonella enterica, the extender domains fold as diverse beta-sandwich structures with widely differing calcium contents. However, all the tetra-tandemers have at least one calcium ion coordinated in the linker region between beta-sandwich domains whose role appears to be the rigidification of the extender region to help the adhesin extend its reach.

Keywords

Calcium coordination
Bacterial adhesin
Adhesion protein
Beta-sandwich domains

Abbreviations

MhLap
Marinobacter hydrocarbonoclasticus long adhesion protein
AhLap
Aeromonas hydrophila long adhesion protein
MpIBP
Marinomonas primoryensis ice-binding protein
RTX
Repeats in toxin
vWFA
von Willebrand Factor A

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Present address: Laboratory Medicine & Pathobiology, University of Toronto ON, Canada