4.7 Article

Structural basis of mammalian glycan targeting by Vibrio cholerae cytolysin and biofilm proteins

Journal

PLOS PATHOGENS
Volume 14, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1006841

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases of the National Institutes of Health [R15 AI101977]
  2. NIH [T32 GM008271]
  3. National Institutes of Health [GM62116, GM098791]

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Vibrio cholerae is an aquatic gram-negative microbe responsible for cholera, a pandemic disease causing life-threatening diarrheal outbreaks in populations with limited access to health care. Like most pathogenic bacteria, V. cholerae secretes virulence factors to assist colonization of human hosts, several of which bind carbohydrate receptors found on cell-surfaces. Understanding how pathogenic virulence proteins specifically target host cells is important for the development of treatment strategies to fight bacterial infections. Vibrio cholerae cytolysin (VCC) is a secreted pore-forming toxin with a carboxy-terminal beta-prism domain that targets complex N-glycans found on mammalian cell-surface proteins. To investigate glycan selectivity, we studied the VCC beta-prism domain and two additional beta-prism domains found within the V. cholerae biofilm matrix protein RbmC. We show that the two RbmC beta-prism domains target a similar repertoire of complex N-glycan receptors as VCC and find through binding and modeling studies that a branched pentasaccharide core (GlcNAc2-Man3) represents the likely footprint interacting with these domains. To understand the structural basis of V. cholerae beta-prism selectivity, we solved high-resolution crystal structures of fragments of the pentasaccharide core bound to one RbmC beta-prism domain and conducted mutagenesis experiments on the VCC toxin. Our results highlight a common strategy for cell-targeting utilized by both toxin and biofilm matrix proteins in Vibrio cholerae and provide a structural framework for understanding the specificity for individual receptors. Our results suggest that a common strategy for disrupting carbohydrate interactions could affect multiple virulence factors produced by V. cholerae, as well as similar beta-prism domains found in other vibrio pathogens.

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