Journal of Bacteriology, February 1999, p. 869-878, Vol. 181, No. 3
0021-9193/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York 10461-1602,1 and Department of Biochemistry, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, California 94305-53072
Received 2 July 1998/Accepted 11 November 1998
Shigella flexneri is a gram-negative bacterium that
causes diarrhea and dysentery by invasion and spread through the
colonic epithelium. Bacteria spread by assembling actin and other
cytoskeletal proteins of the host into "actin tails" at the
bacterial pole; actin tail assembly provides the force required to move
bacteria through the cell cytoplasm and into adjacent cells. The
120-kDa S. flexneri outer membrane protein IcsA is
essential for actin assembly. IcsA is anchored in the outer membrane by
a carboxy-terminal domain (the
domain), such that the
amino-terminal 706 amino acid residues (the
domain) are exposed on
the exterior of the bacillus. The
domain is therefore likely to
contain the domains that are important to interactions with host
factors. We identify and characterize a domain of IcsA within the
domain that bears significant sequence similarity to two repeated
domains of rickettsial OmpA, which has been implicated in rickettsial
actin tail formation. Strains of S. flexneri and
Escherichia coli that carry derivatives of IcsA containing
deletions within this domain display loss of actin recruitment and
increased accessibility to IcsA-specific antibody on the surface of
intracytoplasmic bacteria. However, site-directed mutagenesis of
charged residues within this domain results in actin assembly that is
indistinguishable from that of the wild type, and in vitro competition
of a polypeptide of this domain fused to glutathione
S-transferase did not alter the motility of the wild-type
construct. Taken together, our data suggest that the rickettsial
homology domain of IcsA is required for the proper conformation of IcsA
and that its disruption leads to loss of interactions of other IcsA
domains within the amino terminus with host cytoskeletal proteins.
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