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Structure of a novel antibacterial toxin that exploits elongation factor Tu to cleave specific transfer RNAs.


ABSTRACT: Contact-dependent growth inhibition (CDI) is a mechanism of inter-cellular competition in which Gram-negative bacteria exchange polymorphic toxins using type V secretion systems. Here, we present structures of the CDI toxin from Escherichia coli NC101 in ternary complex with its cognate immunity protein and elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu). The toxin binds exclusively to domain 2 of EF-Tu, partially overlapping the site that interacts with the 3'-end of aminoacyl-tRNA (aa-tRNA). The toxin exerts a unique ribonuclease activity that cleaves the single-stranded 3'-end from tRNAs that contain guanine discriminator nucleotides. EF-Tu is required to support this tRNase activity in vitro, suggesting the toxin specifically cleaves substrate in the context of GTP·EF-Tu·aa-tRNA complexes. However, superimposition of the toxin domain onto previously solved GTP·EF-Tu·aa-tRNA structures reveals potential steric clashes with both aa-tRNA and the switch I region of EF-Tu. Further, the toxin induces conformational changes in EF-Tu, displacing a ?-hairpin loop that forms a critical salt-bridge contact with the 3'-terminal adenylate of aa-tRNA. Together, these observations suggest that the toxin remodels GTP·EF-Tu·aa-tRNA complexes to free the 3'-end of aa-tRNA for entry into the nuclease active site.

SUBMITTER: Michalska K 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5737660 | biostudies-literature | 2017 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Structure of a novel antibacterial toxin that exploits elongation factor Tu to cleave specific transfer RNAs.

Michalska Karolina K   Gucinski Grant C GC   Garza-Sánchez Fernando F   Johnson Parker M PM   Stols Lucy M LM   Eschenfeldt William H WH   Babnigg Gyorgy G   Low David A DA   Goulding Celia W CW   Joachimiak Andrzej A   Hayes Christopher S CS  

Nucleic acids research 20170901 17


Contact-dependent growth inhibition (CDI) is a mechanism of inter-cellular competition in which Gram-negative bacteria exchange polymorphic toxins using type V secretion systems. Here, we present structures of the CDI toxin from Escherichia coli NC101 in ternary complex with its cognate immunity protein and elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu). The toxin binds exclusively to domain 2 of EF-Tu, partially overlapping the site that interacts with the 3'-end of aminoacyl-tRNA (aa-tRNA). The toxin exerts a u  ...[more]

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