Login / Signup

Domain shuffling of a highly mutable ligand binding fold drives adhesin generation across the bacterial kingdom.

Rob BarringerAlice E ParnellAleix LafitaVivian MonzonCatherine R BackMariusz MadejJan PotempaAngela H NobbsSteven G BurstonAlex BatemanPaul R Race
Published in: Proteins (2023)
Bacterial fibrillar adhesins are specialised extracellular polypeptides that promote the attachment of bacteria to the surfaces of other cells or materials. Adhesin-mediated interactions are critical for the establishment and persistence of stable bacterial populations within diverse environmental niches and are important determinants of virulence. The fibronectin (Fn) binding fibrillar adhesin CshA, and its paralogue CshB, play important roles in host colonisation by the oral commensal and opportunistic pathogen Streptococcus gordonii. As paralogues are often catalysts for functional diversification, we have probed the early stages of structural and functional divergence in Csh proteins by determining the X-ray crystal structure of the CshB adhesive domain NR2 and characterising its Fn binding properties in vitro. Despite sharing a common fold, CshB_NR2 displays an ~1.7-fold reduction in Fn binding affinity relative to CshA_NR2. This correlates with reduced electrostatic charge in the Fn binding cleft. Complementary bioinformatic studies reveal that homologues of CshA/B_NR2 domains are widely distributed in both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, where they are found housed within functionally cryptic multi-domain polypeptides. Our findings are consistent with the classification of Csh adhesins and their relatives as members of the recently defined Polymer Adhesin Domain (PAD) family of bacterial proteins. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
Keyphrases