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Structural and functional characterization of an essential RTX subdomain of Bordetella pertussis adenylate cyclase toxin

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 10:37 authored by Cecile Bauche, Alexandre Chenal, Oliver Knapp, Christophe Bodenreider, Roland Benz, Alain Chaffotte, Daniel Ladant
The adenylate cyclase toxin (CyaA) is one of the major virulence factors of Bordetella pertussis, the causative agent of whooping cough. CyaA is able to invade eukaryotic cells by a unique mechanism that consists in a calcium-dependent, direct translocation of the CyaA catalytic domain across the plasma membrane of the target cells. CyaA possesses a series of a glycine- and aspartate-rich nonapeptide repeats (residues 1006-1613) of the prototype GGXG(N/D)DX(L/I/F)X (where X represents any amino acid) that are characteristic of the RTX (repeat in toxin) family of bacterial cytolysins. These repeats are arranged in a tandem fashion and may fold into a characteristic parallel ?-helix or ?-roll motif that constitutes a novel type of calcium binding structure, as revealed by the three-dimensional structure of the Pseudomonas aeruginosa alkaline protease. Here we have characterized the structure-function relationships of various fragments from the CyaA RTX subdomain. Our results indicate that the RTX functional unit includes both the tandem repeated nonapeptide motifs and the adjacent polypeptide segments, which are essential for the folding and calcium responsiveness of the RTX module. Upon calcium binding to the RTX repeats, a conformational rearrangement of the adjacent non-RTX sequences may act as a critical molecular switch to trigger the CyaA entry into target cells.

History

Journal

Journal of Biological Chemistry

Volume

281

Issue

25

Start page

16914

End page

16926

Total pages

13

Publisher

American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2006 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

Former Identifier

2006027874

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2012-10-26

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