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A unique network of attack, defence and competence on the outer membrane of the periodontitis pathogen Tannerella forsythia .

Mirosław KsiążekTheodoros GoulasDanuta MizgalskaArturo Rodríguez-BanqueriUlrich EckhardFlorian VeillardIrena WaligórskaMałgorzata Benedyk-MachaczkaAlicja M Sochaj-GregorczykMariusz MadejIda B ThøgersenJan J EnghildAnna CuppariJoan L ArolasIñaki de DiegoMar López-PelegrínIrene Garcia-FerrerTibisay GuevaraVincent DiveMarie-Louise ZaniThierry MoreauJan PotempaFrancesc Xavier Gomis-Rüth
Published in: Chemical science (2022)
Periodontopathogenic Tannerella forsythia uniquely secretes six peptidases of disparate catalytic classes and families that operate as virulence factors during infection of the gums, the KLIKK-peptidases. Their coding genes are immediately downstream of novel ORFs encoding the 98-132 residue potempins (Pot) A, B1, B2, C, D and E. These are outer-membrane-anchored lipoproteins that specifically and potently inhibit the respective downstream peptidase through stable complexes that protect the outer membrane of T. forsythia , as shown in vivo . Remarkably, PotA also contributes to bacterial fitness in vivo and specifically inhibits matrix metallopeptidase (MMP) 12, a major defence component of oral macrophages, thus featuring a novel and highly-specific physiological MMP inhibitor. Information from 11 structures and high-confidence homology models showed that the potempins are distinct β-barrels with either a five-stranded OB-fold (PotA, PotC and PotD) or an eight-stranded up-and-down fold (PotE, PotB1 and PotB2), which are novel for peptidase inhibitors. Particular loops insert like wedges into the active-site cleft of the genetically-linked peptidases to specifically block them either via a new "bilobal" or the classic "standard" mechanism of inhibition. These results discover a unique, tightly-regulated proteolytic armamentarium for virulence and competence, the KLIKK-peptidase/potempin system.
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