Publications by year

<embed>
Copy and paste this code to your website.

Publications by Authors

Recent Publications

More<embed>
Copy and paste this code to your website.

Structure of a 1.5-MDa adhesin that binds its Antarctic bacterium to diatoms and ice

Citation:

Guo, S. ; Stevens, C. A. ; Vance, T. D. R. ; Olijve, L. L. C. ; Graham, L. A. ; Campbell, R. L. ; Yazdi, S. R. ; Escobedo, C. ; Bar-Dolev, M. ; Yashunsky, V. ; et al. Structure Of A 1.5-Mda Adhesin That Binds Its Antarctic Bacterium To Diatoms And Ice. Science Advances 2017, 3.

Abstract:

Bacterial adhesins are modular cell-surface proteins that mediate adherence to other cells, surfaces, and ligands. The Antarctic bacterium Marinomonas primoryensis uses a 1.5-MDa adhesin comprising over 130 domains to position it on ice at the top of the water column for better access to oxygen and nutrients. We have reconstructed this 0.6-μm-long adhesin using a “dissect and build” structural biology approach and have established complementary roles for its five distinct regions. Domains in region I (RI) tether the adhesin to the type I secretion machinery in the periplasm of the bacterium and pass it through the outer membrane. RII comprises  120 identical immunoglobulin-like β-sandwich domains that rigidify on binding Ca2+ to project the adhesion regions RIII and RIV into the medium. RIII contains ligand-binding domains that join diatoms and bacteria together in a mixed-species community on the underside of sea ice where incident light is maximal. RIV is the ice-binding domain, and the terminal RV domain contains several “repeats-in-toxin” motifs and a noncleavable signal sequence that target proteins for export via the type I secretion system. Similar structural architecture is present in the adhesins of many pathogenic bacteria and provides a guide to finding and blocking binding domains to weaken infectivity.

Website