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Common mechanisms of target cell recognition and immunity for class II bacteriocins

353

Citations

31

References

2007

Year

TLDR

Target cell recognition and producer self‑protection mechanisms in peptide bacteriocins remain poorly understood. We demonstrate that lactococcin A binds the man‑PTS IIC/IID components of susceptible cells, and its immunity protein LciA forms a bacteriocin‑dependent complex with these receptors to prevent killing; deletion and heterologous expression experiments confirm IIC/IID are sufficient for sensitivity while IIAB is dispensable, and similar mechanisms are employed by other class II bacteriocins.

Abstract

The mechanisms of target cell recognition and producer cell self-protection (immunity) are both important yet poorly understood issues in the biology of peptide bacteriocins. In this report, we provide genetic and biochemical evidence that lactococcin A, a permeabilizing peptide–bacteriocin from Lactococcus lactis , uses components of the mannose phosphotransferase system (man-PTS) of susceptible cells as target/receptor. We present experimental evidence that the immunity protein LciA forms a strong complex with the receptor proteins and the bacteriocin, thereby preventing cells from being killed. Importantly, the complex between LciA and the man-PTS components (IIAB, IIC, and IID) appears to involve an on–off type mechanism that allows complex formation only in the presence of bacteriocin; otherwise no complexes were observed between LciA and the receptor proteins. Deletion of the man-PTS operon combined with biochemical studies revealed that the presence of the membrane-located components IIC and IID was sufficient for sensitivity to lactococcin A as well as complex formation with LciA. The cytoplasmic component of the man-PTS, IIAB, was not required for the biological sensitivity or for complex formation. Furthermore, heterologous expression of the lactococcal man-PTS operon rendered the insensitive Lactobacillus sakei susceptible to lactococcin A. We also provide evidence that, not only lactococcin A, but other class II peptide-bacteriocins including lactococcin B and some Listeria -active pediocin-like bacteriocins also target the man-PTS components IIC and IID on susceptible cells and that their immunity proteins involve a mechanism in producer cell self-protection similar to that observed for LciA.

References

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