1. FusC, a member of the M16 protease family acquired by bacteria for iron piracy against plants
- Author
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Vijay Dhanesakaran, Jonathan J. Wilksch, Richard A. Strugnell, Iain D. Hay, Trevor Lithgow, Jiawei Wang, Rhys Grinter, Ian R. Henderson, Gordon Dougan, Jiangning Song, Dene R. Littler, Mark R. Davies, Simone A. Beckham, Don Teng, Lithgow, Trevor [0000-0002-0102-7884], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Cell Membranes ,Pectobacterium ,Markov models ,Plant Science ,Biochemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Small-Angle Scattering ,Scattering ,Hidden Markov models ,Biology (General) ,Ferredoxin ,Phylogeny ,Plant Proteins ,2. Zero hunger ,Crystallography ,Plant Bacterial Pathogens ,Membrane transport protein ,Physics ,General Neuroscience ,food and beverages ,Metalloendopeptidases ,Proteases ,Plants ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Enzymes ,Cell biology ,Transport protein ,Protein Transport ,Plant protein ,Physical Sciences ,Crystal Structure ,Ferredoxins ,Cellular Structures and Organelles ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Bacterial outer membrane ,Research Article ,Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins ,Mitochondrial processing peptidase ,Protein family ,QH301-705.5 ,Materials by Structure ,Iron ,Materials Science ,Plant Pathogens ,Biology ,Crystals ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Bacterial Proteins ,Solid State Physics ,Plastid ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Bacteria ,fungi ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Proteins ,Membrane Proteins ,Membrane Transport Proteins ,Probability theory ,Cell Biology ,Plant Pathology ,Outer Membrane Proteins ,030104 developmental biology ,Enzymology ,biology.protein ,Mathematics ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Iron is essential for life. Accessing iron from the environment can be a limiting factor that determines success in a given environmental niche. For bacteria, access of chelated iron from the environment is often mediated by TonB-dependent transporters (TBDTs), which are β-barrel proteins that form sophisticated channels in the outer membrane. Reports of iron-bearing proteins being used as a source of iron indicate specific protein import reactions across the bacterial outer membrane. The molecular mechanism by which a folded protein can be imported in this way had remained mysterious, as did the evolutionary process that could lead to such a protein import pathway. How does the bacterium evolve the specificity factors that would be required to select and import a protein encoded on another organism’s genome? We describe here a model whereby the plant iron–bearing protein ferredoxin can be imported across the outer membrane of the plant pathogen Pectobacterium by means of a Brownian ratchet mechanism, thereby liberating iron into the bacterium to enable its growth in plant tissues. This import pathway is facilitated by FusC, a member of the same protein family as the mitochondrial processing peptidase (MPP). The Brownian ratchet depends on binding sites discovered in crystal structures of FusC that engage a linear segment of the plant protein ferredoxin. Sequence relationships suggest that the bacterial gene encoding FusC has previously unappreciated homologues in plants and that the protein import mechanism employed by the bacterium is an evolutionary echo of the protein import pathway in plant mitochondria and plastids., Author summary Earth’s carbon cycle depends on saprophytic microbes to rot old or diseased plant matter and recycle carbon from that biomass. Some bacteria (phytopathogens) have evolved to cause disease and rot in even healthy plants and may have utility as biological control agents against noxious weeds. To understand the mechanisms driving each of these scenarios has significance in environmental engineering and agriculture. Access to iron is a limiting factor for bacteria-mediated plant rot. Here, we show how a plant-pathogenic bacteria has reevolved a mechanism, analogous to the protein import pathways that evolved in plant plastids and mitochondria, to import the plant iron–bearing protein ferredoxin from plant tissue. The study is based on structural and biophysical characterization of a key M16 family protease, FusC, resident inside the bacterial outer membrane.
- Published
- 2018