Abstract
In Gram-negative bacteria, a wide variety of virulence factors are secreted via the autotransporter (AT) pathway. Intriguingly, there is no significant concentration of ATP in the periplasm, nor a proton gradient across the OM, so the energetic origin of efficient secretion of AT proteins is unknown. More than 97% of AT proteins are predicted to contain right-handed parallel β-helical structure, and the three crystal structures available for AT passenger domains each contain a long right-handed parallel β helix. Previous studies have shown that pertactin, an AT from Bordetella pertussis, exhibits three-state folding and has a C-terminal stable core structure. Here, we show that Pet, an unrelated AT from Escherichia coli, also exhibits three-state unfolding and also has a stable core structure. Deletion mutants, mass spectrometry, and N-terminal sequencing demonstrate that the Pet stable core is also located near the C-terminus of the passenger domain. Moreover, sequence analysis suggests that three-state folding and a C-terminal stable core structure could be important general features of the biogenesis of AT proteins in vivo. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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Renn, J. P., & Clark, P. L. (2008). A conserved stable core structure in the passenger domain β-helix of autotransporter virulence proteins. Biopolymers, 89(5), 420–427. https://doi.org/10.1002/bip.20924
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