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J. Bacteriol., Oct 1996, 5706-5711, Vol 178, No. 19
AL Jones, EM Lai, K Shirasu and CI Kado
The mechanism of DNA transmission between distinct organisms has remained a
subject of long-standing interest. Agrobacterium tumefaciens mediates the
transfer of plant oncogenes in the form of a 25-kb T-DNA sector of a
resident Ti plasmid. A growing body of evidence leading to the elucidation
of the mechanism involved in T-DNA transfer comes from studies on the vir
genes contained in six major operons that are required for the T-DNA
transfer process. Recent comparative amino acid sequence studies of the
products of these vir genes have revealed interesting similarities between
Tra proteins of Escherichia coli F factor, which are involved in the
biosynthesis and assembly of a conjugative pilus, and VirB proteins encoded
by genes of the virB operon of A. tumefaciens pTiC58. We have previously
identified VirB2 as a pilin-like protein with processing features similar
to those of TraA of the F plasmid and have shown that VirB2 is required for
the biosynthesis of pilin on a flagella-free Agrobacterium strain. In the
present work, VirB2 is found to be processed and localized primarily to the
cytoplasmic membrane in E. coli. Cleavage of VirB2 was predicted previously
to occur between alanine and glutamine in the sequence -Pro-
Ala-Ala-Ala-Glu-Ser-. This peptidase cleavage sequence was mutated by an
amino acid substitution for one of the alanine residues (D for A at
position 45 [A45D]), by deletion of the three adjacent alanines, and by a
frameshift mutation 22 bp upstream of the predicted Ala-Glu cleavage site.
With the exception of the frameshift mutation, the alanine mutations do not
prevent VirB2 processing in E. coli, while in A. tumefaciens they result in
VirB2 instability, since no holo- or processed protein is detectable. All
of the above mutations abolish virulence. The frameshift mutation abolishes
processing in both organisms. These results indicate that VirB2 is
processed into a 7.2- kDa structural protein. The cleavage site in E. coli
appears to differ from that predicted in A. tumefaciens. Yet, the cleavage
sites are relatively close to each other since the final cleavage products
are similar in size and are produced irrespective of the length of the
amino-terminal portion of the holoprotein. As we observed previously, the
similarity between the processing of VirB2 in A. tumefaciens and the
processing of the propilin TraA of the F plasmid now extends to E. coli.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
VirB2 is a processed pilin-like protein encoded by the Agrobacterium tumefaciens Ti plasmid
Department of Plant Pathology, University of California, Davis 95616, USA.
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