Identification of CgeA as a glycoprotein that anchors polysaccharides to the spore surface in Bacillus subtilis.

Yusei Nakaya, Miu Uchiike, Mayuko Hattori, Momoka Moriyama,Kimihiro Abe, Ella Kim,Patrick Eichenberger,Daisuke Imamura,Tsutomu Sato

Molecular microbiology(2023)

引用 0|浏览3
暂无评分
摘要
The Bacillus subtilis spore is composed of a core, containing chromosomal DNA, surrounded by a cortex layer made of peptidoglycan, and a coat composed of concentric proteinaceous layers. A polysaccharide layer is added to the spore surface, and likely anchored to the crust, the coat outermost layer. However, the identity of the coat protein(s) to which the spore polysaccharides (SPS) are attached is uncertain. First, we showed that the crust proteins CotVWXYZ and CgeA were all contained in the peeled SPS layer obtained from a strain missing CotE, the outer coat morphogenetic protein, suggesting that the SPS is indeed bound to at least one of the spore surface proteins. Second, CgeA is known to be located at the most downstream position in the crust assembly pathway. An analysis of truncated variants of CgeA suggested that its N-terminal half is required for localization to the spore surface, while its C-terminal half is necessary for SPS addition. Third, an amino acid substitution strategy revealed that SPS was anchored at threonine 112 (T112), which constitutes a probable O-glycosylation site on CgeA. Our results indicated that CgeA is a glycoprotein required to initiate SPS assembly and serves as an anchor protein linking the crust and SPS layers.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Bacillus subtilis, glycosylation, sporulation
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要