The gram-negative pathogen Providencia stuartii forms floating communities within which adjacent cells are in apparent contact, before depositing as canonical surface-attached biofilms. Because porins are the most abundant proteins in the outer membrane of gram-negative bacteria, we hypothesized that they could be involved in cell-to-cell contact and undertook a structure-function relationship study on the two porins of P. stuartii, Omp-Pst1 and Omp-Pst2. Our crystal structures reveal that these porins can self-associate through their extracellular loops, forming dimers of trimers (DOTs) that could enable cell-to-cell contact within floating communities. Support for this hypothesis was obtained by studying the porin-dependent aggregation of liposomes and model cells. The observation that facing channels are open in the two porin structures suggests that DOTs could not only promote cell-to-cell contact but also contribute to intercellular communication.
CITATION STYLE
El-Khatib, M., Nasrallah, C., Lopes, J., Tran, Q. T., Tetreau, G., Basbous, H., … Colletier, J. P. (2018). Porin self-association enables cell-to-cell contact in Providencia stuartii floating communities. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 115(10), E2220–E2228. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1714582115
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