Structural and functional insights into the delivery of a bacterial Rhs pore-forming toxin to the membrane

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Abstract

Bacterial competition is a significant driver of toxin polymorphism, which allows continual compensatory evolution between toxins and the resistance developed to overcome their activity. Bacterial Rearrangement hot spot (Rhs) proteins represent a widespread example of toxin polymorphism. Here, we present the 2.45 Å cryo-electron microscopy structure of Tse5, an Rhs protein central to Pseudomonas aeruginosa type VI secretion system-mediated bacterial competition. This structural insight, coupled with an extensive array of biophysical and genetic investigations, unravels the multifaceted functional mechanisms of Tse5. The data suggest that interfacial Tse5-membrane binding delivers its encapsulated pore-forming toxin fragment to the target bacterial membrane, where it assembles pores that cause cell depolarisation and, ultimately, bacterial death.

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González-Magaña, A., Tascón, I., Altuna-Alvarez, J., Queralt-Martín, M., Colautti, J., Velázquez, C., … Albesa-Jové, D. (2023). Structural and functional insights into the delivery of a bacterial Rhs pore-forming toxin to the membrane. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-43585-5

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