Tina M. Henkin

Snyder and Champness Molecular Genetics of Bacteria


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channels in the outer membrane presents some of the same problems associated with having channels in the cytoplasmic membrane, such as the SecYEG channel. For example, how do they select the proteins that are to go through without letting others through, and how do they keep smaller molecules from going in and out? This process is called channel gating; the gate is open only when the protein being exported passes through. A second issue is the source of the energy to export a protein through the outer membrane. There is no ATP or GTP in the periplasmic space to provide energy, and the outer membrane is not known to have a proton gradient across it to create an electric field. In this section, we describe mechanisms used by the various secretion systems for solving these problems and mention some examples of proteins exported by each of the systems.

      TYPE I SECRETION SYSTEMS

Schematic illustration of the type I, II, III, and IV protein secretion systems.

      The classical example of a protein secreted by a T1SS is the HylA hemolysin protein of pathogenic E. coli. This toxin inserts itself into the plasma membrane of eukaryotic cells, creating pores that allow the contents to leak out. It uses a dedicated T1SS composed of HylB (the ABC protein) and HylD (the integral membrane protein). Because HylA is not transported through the inner membrane by either the SecYEG channel or the Tat system, it does not contain a cleavable N-terminal signal sequence. Instead, like all proteins secreted by T1SS, it has a sequence at its carboxyl terminus that is recognized by the ABC transporter but, unlike a signal sequence, is not cleaved off as the protein is exported.

      The TolC channel has been crystallized and its structure determined (see Koronakis et al., Suggested Reading). This structure has provided interesting insights into the structure of β-barrels in general and how they can be gated and opened to transport specific molecules. Briefly, three TolC polypeptides come together to form the channel through the outer membrane. Each of these monomers contributes four transmembrane domains to form a β-barrel that is always open on one side of the outer membrane, the side on the outside of the cell. In addition, each monomer has four longer α-helical domains that are long enough to extend all the way across the periplasm. These four α-helical domains contribute to the formation of a second channel that is aligned with the first channel and traverses the periplasm. Because of these two channels, the secreted protein can be transported all the way from the inner membrane to the outside of the cell. In addition, the channel in the periplasm can open and close and therefore “gate” the channel. When a protein is being transported and the TolC channel is recruited, the α-helical domains of the periplasmic channel may rotate, which untwists them and opens the gate on the periplasmic side. The molecule is then secreted all the way through both channels to the outside of the cell.

      TYPE II SECRETION SYSTEMS

      Type II secretion systems (T2SS) are very complex, consisting of as many as 15 different proteins (Figure 2.39). Most of these proteins are in the inner membrane and periplasm, and only 1 is in the outer membrane, where 12 of the secretin polypeptides come together to form a large β-barrel with a pore large enough to pass already folded proteins. The formation of this channel requires the participation of normal cellular lipoproteins that may become part of the structure. The secretin protein has a long N terminus that extends through the periplasm to make contact with other proteins of the T2SS in the inner membrane. This periplasmic portion of the secretin may also gate the channel, as with the TolC channel.

      Even though many of the components of the T2SS are in the inner membrane, they use either the SecYEG channel or the Tat pathway to get their substrates through the inner membrane. Therefore, proteins transported by this system have either the Sec type or the Tat type of cleavable signal sequences at their N termini. Protein folding is usually completed in the periplasm before transport through the outer membrane. Some of the periplasmic and inner membrane proteins of the secretion system are related to components of pili and have been called pseudopilin proteins (see chapter 4). It has been proposed that the formation and retraction of these pseudopili work like a piston to push the protein through the secretin channel in the outer membrane to the outside of the cell. In this way, the energy for secretion could come from the inner membrane or the cytoplasm, as shown in the figure, since, as mentioned above, there is no source of energy in the periplasm. In support of this model, the pseudopili have been seen to produce pili outside an E. coli cell when the gene for the pilin-like protein was cloned and overproduced in E. coli.

      TYPE III SECRETION SYSTEMS

      Type III secretion systems (T3SS) are probably the most impressive of the secretion systems (see Galan and Waksman, Suggested Reading). They form a syringe-like structure composed of about 20 proteins, which takes up virulence proteins called effectors from the cytoplasm of the bacterium and injects them directly through both membranes into a eukaryotic cell (Figure 2.39). For this reason, they are sometimes called injectisomes. They exist in many Gram-negative animal