Cryo-EM structure of a type IV secretion system.
Kévin MacéAbhinav K VadakkepatAdam RedzejNatalya LukoyanovaClasien OomenNathalie BraunMarta UklejaFang LuTiago R D CostaElena V OrlovaJulien S BakerNick V GrishinGabriel WaksmanPublished in: Nature (2022)
Bacterial conjugation is the fundamental process of unidirectional transfer of DNAs, often plasmid DNAs, from a donor cell to a recipient cell 1 . It is the primary means by which antibiotic resistance genes spread among bacterial populations 2,3 . In Gram-negative bacteria, conjugation is mediated by a large transport apparatus-the conjugative type IV secretion system (T4SS)-produced by the donor cell and embedded in both its outer and inner membranes. The T4SS also elaborates a long extracellular filament-the conjugative pilus-that is essential for DNA transfer 4,5 . Here we present a high-resolution cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) structure of a 2.8 megadalton T4SS complex composed of 92 polypeptides representing 8 of the 10 essential T4SS components involved in pilus biogenesis. We added the two remaining components to the structural model using co-evolution analysis of protein interfaces, to enable the reconstitution of the entire system including the pilus. This structure describes the exceptionally large protein-protein interaction network required to assemble the many components that constitute a T4SS and provides insights on the unique mechanism by which they elaborate pili.