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  • Mechanisms of substrate recognition by a typhoid toxin secretion-associated muramidase.

Mechanisms of substrate recognition by a typhoid toxin secretion-associated muramidase.

eLife (2020-01-21)
Tobias Geiger, Maria Lara-Tejero, Yong Xiong, Jorge E Galán
ABSTRACT

Typhoid toxin is a virulence factor for the bacterial pathogen Salmonella Typhi, which causes typhoid fever in humans. After its synthesis by intracellular bacteria, typhoid toxin is secreted into the lumen of the Salmonella-containing vacuole by a secretion mechanism strictly dependent on TtsA, a specific muramidase that facilitates toxin transport through the peptidoglycan layer. Here we show that substrate recognition by TtsA depends on a discrete domain within its carboxy terminus, which targets the enzyme to the bacterial poles to recognize YcbB-edited peptidoglycan. Comparison of the atomic structures of TtsA bound to its substrate and that of a close homolog with different specificity identified specific determinants involved in substrate recognition. Combined with structure-guided mutagenesis and in vitro and in vivo crosslinking experiments, this study provides an unprecedented view of the mechanisms by which a muramidase recognizes its peptidoglycan substrate to facilitate protein secretion.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

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Suberic acid bis(3-sulfo-N-hydroxysuccinimide ester) sodium salt, ≥95% (H-NMR), powder
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B834(DE3) Competent Cells - Novagen, B834 is the parental strain for BL21. These hosts are methionine auxotrophs and allow high specific activity labeling of target proteins with 35S-methionine and selenomethionine for crystallography.
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