Bacterial nucleotidyl cyclase toxins are potent virulence factors that upon entry into eukaryotic cells are stimulated by endogenous cofactors to catalyze the production of large amounts of 3'5'-cyclic nucleoside monophosphates. The activity of the effector ExoY from Pseudomonas aeruginosa is stimulated by the filamentous form of actin (F-actin). Utilizing yeast phenotype analysis, site-directed mutagenesis, functional biochemical assays, and confocal microscopy, we demonstrate that the last nine amino acids of the C terminus of ExoY are crucial for the interaction with F-actin and, consequently, for ExoY's enzymatic activity in vitro and toxicity in a yeast model. We observed that isolated C-terminal sequences of P. aeruginosa ExoY that had been fused to a carrier protein bind to F-actin and that synthetic peptides corresponding to the extreme ExoY C terminus inhibit ExoY enzymatic activity in vitro and compete with the full-length enzyme for F-actin binding. Interestingly, we noted that various P. aeruginosa isolates of the PA14 family, including highly virulent strains, harbor ExoY variants with a mutation altering the C terminus of this effector. We found that these naturally occurring ExoY variants display drastically reduced enzymatic activity and toxicity. Our findings shed light on the molecular basis of the ExoY-F-actin interaction, revealing that the extreme C terminus of ExoY is critical for binding to F-actin in target cells and that some P. aeruginosa isolates carry C-terminally mutated, low-activity ExoY variants.
Keywords: ExoY; Pseudomonas aeruginosa (P. aeruginosa); actin; bacterial toxin; confocal microscopy; cyclic nucleotide; protein cross-linking; protein-protein interaction; type III secretion system (T3SS).
© 2018 Belyy et al.