Vibrio parahaemolyticus RhsP represents a widespread group of pro-effectors for type VI secretion systems

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Abstract

Type VI secretion systems (T6SSs) translocate effector proteins, such as Rhs toxins, to eukaryotic cells or prokaryotic competitors. All T6SS Rhs-type effectors characterized thus far contain a PAAR motif or a similar structure. Here, we describe a T6SS-dependent delivery mechanism for a subset of Rhs proteins that lack a PAAR motif. We show that the N-terminal Rhs domain of protein RhsP (or VP1517) from Vibrio parahaemolyticus inhibits the activity of the C-terminal DNase domain. Upon auto-proteolysis, the Rhs fragment remains inside the cells, and the C-terminal region interacts with PAAR2 and is secreted by T6SS2; therefore, RhsP acts as a pro-effector. Furthermore, we show that RhsP contributes to the control of certain “social cheaters” (opaR mutants). Genes encoding proteins with similar Rhs and PAAR-interacting domains, but diverse C-terminal regions, are widely distributed among Vibrio species.

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Jiang, N., Tang, L., Xie, R., Li, Z., Burkinshaw, B., Liang, X., … Zheng, J. (2018, December 1). Vibrio parahaemolyticus RhsP represents a widespread group of pro-effectors for type VI secretion systems. Nature Communications. Nature Publishing Group. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-06201-5

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