Article
Pathogenic Acinetobacter species have a functional type I secretion system and contact-dependent inhibition systems
Author/s | Harding, Christian M.
Pulido, Marina R. Venanzio, Gisela Di Kinsella, Rachel L. Webb, Andrew I. Scott, Nichollas E. Pachón Díaz, Jerónimo Feldman, Mario F. |
Department | Universidad de Sevilla. Departamento de Medicina |
Publication Date | 2017-04-03 |
Deposit Date | 2020-10-23 |
Published in |
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Abstract | Pathogenic Acinetobacter species, including Acinetobacter
baumannii and Acinetobacter nosocomialis, are opportunistic
human pathogens of increasing relevance worldwide. Although
their mechanisms of drug resistance are ... Pathogenic Acinetobacter species, including Acinetobacter baumannii and Acinetobacter nosocomialis, are opportunistic human pathogens of increasing relevance worldwide. Although their mechanisms of drug resistance are well studied, the virulence factors that governAcinetobacter pathogenesis are incompletely characterized. Here we define the complete secretome of A. nosocomialis strain M2 in minimal medium and demonstrate that pathogenicAcinetobacter species produce both a functional type I secretion system (T1SS) and a contact-dependent inhibition (CDI) system. Using bioinformatics, quantitative proteomics, and mutational analyses, we show that Acinetobacter uses its T1SS for exporting two putative T1SS effectors, an Repeatsin-Toxin (RTX)-serralysin-like toxin, and the biofilm-associated protein (Bap). Moreover, we found that mutation of any component of the T1SS system abrogated type VI secretion activity under nutrient-limited conditions, indicating a previously unrecognized cross-talk between these two systems. We also demonstrate that the Acinetobacter T1SS is required for biofilm formation. Last, we show that both A. nosocomialis and A. baumannii produce functioning CDI systems that mediate growth inhibition of sister cells lacking the cognate immunity protein. The Acinetobacter CDI systems are widely distributed across pathogenicAcinetobacter species, with manyA. baumannii isolates harboring two distinct CDI systems. Collectively, these data demonstrate the power of differential, quantitative proteomics approaches to study secreted proteins, define the role of previously uncharacterized protein export systems, and observe cross-talk between secretion systems in the pathobiology of medically relevant Acinetobacter species |
Project ID. | CD14/00014 |
Citation | Harding, C.M., Pulido, M.R., Venanzio, G.D., Kinsella, R.L., Webb, A.I., Scott, N.E.,...,Feldman, M.F. (2017). Pathogenic Acinetobacter species have a functional type I secretion system and contact-dependent inhibition systems. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 292 (22), 9075-9087. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M117.781575. |
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zbc9075.pdf | 2.137Mb | [PDF] | View/ | Pathogenic Acinetobacter |