Publication | Open Access
The versatile Legionella effector protein DrrA
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Citations
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References
2011
Year
Protein SecretionLegionella Protein DrraBacteriophageMolecular BiologyInfection ControlSecretory PathwayCell SignalingProtein FunctionSpecific Tyrosine ResidueVirulence FactorProtein TransportCell BiologyClinical MicrobiologySignal TransductionPathogenesisMicrobiologyIntracellular TraffickingMedicineLegionella Survives
The human pathogen Legionella pneumophila is a bacterium that infects human cells and interferes with intracellular signaling. The Legionella protein DrrA is one of the numerous effectors that the bacterium translocates into the host cytosol. DrrA binds to the Legionella containing vacuole (LCV), an organelle in which Legionella survives and replicates, and recruits and activates the vesicular trafficking regulator Rab1 to redirect vesicular trafficking between the endoplasmatic reticulum and the Golgi. After depositing Rab1 at the LCV, DrrA covalently modifies Rab1 with an AMP moiety at a specific tyrosine residue (Tyr77), which is centrally located in the functionally important switch II region. This adenylylation reaction interferes with the deactivation of Rab1 by GTPase activating proteins (GAPs), thereby presumably prolonging the active state of the protein at the LCV. Here, we summarize the versatile properties of DrrA and speculate on the effects of Rab1-adenylylation.
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