Rickettsia sca2 has evolved formin-like activity through a different molecular mechanism

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Abstract

Sca2 (surface cell antigen 2) is the only bacterial protein known to promote both actin filament nucleation and profilin-dependent elongation, mimicking eukaryotic formins to assemble actin comet tails for Rickettsia motility. We show that Sca2's functional mimicry of formins is achieved through a unique mechanism. Unlike formins, Sca2 is monomeric, but has N- and C-terminal repeat domains (NRD and CRD) that interact with each other for processive barbed-end elongation. The crystal structure of NRD reveals a previously undescribed fold, consisting of helix-loop-helix repeats arranged into an overall crescent shape. CRD is predicted to share this fold and might form together with NRD, a doughnut-shaped formin-like structure. In between NRD and CRD, proline-rich sequences mediate the incorporation of profilin-Actin for elongation, and WASP-homology 2 (WH2) domains recruit actin monomers for nucleation. Sca2's a-helical fold is unusual among Gram-negative autotransporters, which overwhelmingly fold as β-solenoids. Rickettsia has therefore 'rediscovered' formin-like actin nucleation and elongation.

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Madasu, Y., Suarez, C., Kast, D. J., Kovar, D. R., & Dominguez, R. (2013). Rickettsia sca2 has evolved formin-like activity through a different molecular mechanism. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 110(29). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1307235110

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