Publication | Open Access
Plasticity of the domain structure in FlgJ, a bacterial protein involved in flagellar rod formation
27
Citations
33
References
2006
Year
Pg LayerProkaryotic SystemRod PenetrationVirulence FactorRod AssemblyBacteriologyMolecular BiologyMicrobiologyFlagellar Rod FormationMolecular MicrobiologyDomain StructureMedicineBacterial ProteinStructural Biology
Bacterial flagellar rod structure is built across the peptidoglycan (PG) layer. A Salmonella enterica flagellar protein FlgJ is believed to consist of two functional domains, the N-terminal half acting as a scaffold or cap essential for rod assembly and the C-terminal half acting as a PG hydrolase (PGase) that makes a hole in the PG layer to facilitate rod penetration. In this study, molecular data analyses were conducted on FlgJ data sets sampled from a variety of bacterial species, and three types of FlgJ homologs were identified: (i) "canonical dual-domain" type found in beta- and gamma-proteobacteria that has a domain for one of the PGases, acetylmuramidase (Acm), at the C terminus, (ii) "non-canonical dual-domain" type found in the genus Desulfovibrio (delta-proteobacteria) that bears a domain for another PGase, M23/M37-family peptidase (Pep), at the C terminus and (iii) "single-domain" type found in phylogenetically diverged lineages that lacks the Acm or Pep domain. FlgJ phylogeny, together with the domain architecture, suggested that the single-domain type was the original form of FlgJ and the canonical dual-domain type had evolved from the single-domain type by fusion of the Acm domain to its C terminus in the common ancestor of beta- and gamma-proteobacteria. The non-canonical dual-domain type may have been formed by fusion of the Pep domain to the single-domain type in the ancestor of Desulfovibrio. In some lineages of gamma-proteobacteria, the Acm domain appeared to be lost secondarily from the dual-domain type FlgJ to yield again a single-domain type one. To rationalize the underlying mechanism that gave rise to the two different types of dual-domain FlgJ homologs, we propose a model assuming the lineage-specific co-option of flagellum-specific PGase from diverged housekeeping PGases in bacteria.
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