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Journal of Bacteriology, January 2009, p. 608-615, Vol. 191, No. 2
0021-9193/09/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.01244-08
Copyright © 2009, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, University of Michigan, 830 North University, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109
Received 5 September 2008/ Accepted 3 November 2008
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Curli biogenesis requires the coordinated efforts of proteins encoded by two divergently transcribed operons. csgBAC encode the structural subunits of the fiber, CsgA and CsgB. A third gene in the operon, csgC, has no reported role in E. coli curli biosynthesis, but the csgC homolog in Salmonella enterica serovar Enteritidis may be important for curli ultrastructural properties (13). csgDEFG encode proteins necessary for the production, secretion, and assembly of CsgA and CsgB. CsgD is a transcriptional activator of the csgBAC operon. CsgG is an outer membrane-localized lipoprotein that is required for the secretion of CsgA and CsgB to the cell surface (28). CsgE and CsgF can interact with CsgG at the outer membrane and modulate the stability of CsgA and CsgB, and they are required for efficient curli assembly (8, 28). However, the precise molecular action of CsgE and CsgF remains unclear.
One model of curli assembly is the nucleation-precipitation pathway, which begins with the CsgG-mediated export of preamyloid CsgA and CsgB to the extracellular milieu (2, 21, 28). At the cell surface, CsgB presents an amyloid template to CsgA and "nucleates" soluble CsgA into insoluble amyloid curli fibers (4, 15, 16). Remarkably, CsgA and CsgB do not have to be expressed from the same cell in order for curli to be assembled. Some CsgA expressed by a "donor" cell can polymerize when it contacts a CsgB-expressing "acceptor" cell in a process termed interbacterial complementation (15). In vitro polymerization experiments with purified CsgA and CsgB further suggest that physical contacts between these proteins drive efficient polymerization (15, 16, 31).
We investigated the possibility that the curli secretion protein, CsgG, was restricted to certain areas of the cell to promote the interaction of CsgA and CsgB during curli assembly. Studies with many bacterial systems have revealed a nonuniform distribution of proteins involved in chemotaxis, cell division, and secretion (5, 6, 22). Spatial restriction, rather than random diffusion, may facilitate the protein-protein interactions required to achieve many cellular processes. For example, the enteropathogenic E. coli bundle-forming pilus secretion apparatus is polarly localized (19). Also, the Myxococcus type IV pilus secretin, PilQ, is found exclusively at the poles (23). The ExPortal system in Streptococcus pyogenes, which serves as the major site of protein secretion, is also spatially localized to discrete regions of the cell. Coupled to the ExPortal are chaperone-like proteins that facilitate folding of newly secreted proteins, suggesting spatial and temporal coordination of protein secretion and folding (7, 29). We found that CsgG is organized into foci in curli-producing cells and that this organization requires efficient fiber polymerization. We also found that CsgG contains a domain that is exposed to the cell surface and that it forms a heat- and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-resistant complex in the outer membrane. Finally, we show that other CsgG-interacting proteins are required for the spatial restriction of CsgG, which provides the first molecular evidence of how CsgG may be modulated by other csg-encoded proteins.
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TABLE 1. Strains and plasmids used in this study
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Electron microscopy (EM) and immunogold labeling. Equal numbers of cells grown on YESCA plates at 26°C for 40 h were suspended in 1x PBS (pH 7.4). A 20-µl drop of cell suspension was placed on a piece of Parafilm, and a 200-mesh Formvar-coated grid (Ernest F. Fullam, Inc., NY) was floated on the drop for 2 min. The grid was transferred to a 20-µl drop of 1x PBS and left for an additional 2 min before being stained on a drop of freshly prepared 0.5% uranyl acetate (8). Bacteria were observed using a Phillips CM12 scanning transmission electron microscope. Immunostaining of samples was performed essentially as previously described, with some modifications (30). Briefly, grids with cells bound as described above were subjected to sequential incubation with (20 µl of each solution at room temperature [RT] unless noted otherwise) 1% BSA-1x PBS (5 min); one of the antibody solutions (as indicated in Results) 1/500 anti-CsgG-0.1% BSA-1x PBS, 1/200 anti-CsgA-0.1% BSA-1x PBS, or 1/200 anti-CsgB-0.1% BSA-1x PBS (60 min at 37°C); 0.1% BSA-1x PBS (three times, 2 min each wash); 1/15 anti-rabbit IgG-10-nm gold particles (Sigma, MO)-1% BSA-1x PBS (30 min at 37°C); and 0.1% BSA-1x PBS (three times, 2 min each wash). Preparations were then fixed with 1% glutaraldehyde-1x PBS (5 min) and washed twice with sterile filtered water (5 min each wash). Grids were stained with 0.5% uranyl acetate and viewed with a transmission electron microscope.
Cell fractionation, gel electrophoresis, and immunoblotting. Cell-free suspensions (CFS) were generated by passing cells twice through a French press at 14,000 lb/in2, followed by centrifugation at 3,000 x g for 15 min to remove unbroken cells. Proteins in the CFS were solubilized with 0.5% Elugent (Calbiochem, Darmstadt, Germany). Cells were also fractionated by detergent extraction into soluble and inner and outer membrane fractions exactly as previously described (28). Elugent-soluble proteins from the Sarkosyl-insoluble outer membrane fraction or the CFS were suspended in loading buffer containing 1.5% SDS and resolved by 5% stacking and 13% or 8% resolving discontinuous SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Blots were probed with anti-CsgG antibodies diluted 1/100,000 in 1% milk-1% BSA plus 1x Tris-buffered saline-Tween 20 (TBST) as described previously (28). Antibodies were removed from blots and reprobed for different antigens by the method described previously (20).
Intact cell dot blotting. Cells were collected from YESCA plates, suspended in 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8), and left unperturbed or sonicated for 30 s before being spotted unto a nitrocellulose membrane. Blots were air dried for 15 min before blocking with 1% milk-1% BSA-1x TBST on a shaker for 2 h at RT or overnight at 4°C. Blots were probed with anti-CsgG antibody diluted 1/100,000 in 1% milk-1% BSA-1x TBST (28), anti-DsbA antibody diluted 1/3,500 in 3% milk-1x TBST (a gift of J. Bardwell), anti-CsgA antibody diluted 1/5,000 in 1% milk-1% BSA-1x TBST (8), anti-CsgB antibody diluted 1/500 in 1% milk-1% BSA-1x TBST (16), or commercially available antihexahistidine antibodies (Covance, NJ) diluted 1/5,000 in 1% milk-1% BSA-1x TBST for 1 h at RT and washed three times (5 min each) in 1x TBST. Next, blots were probed with goat anti-rabbit antibodies conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (Sigma, MO) diluted with 1% milk-1% BSA-1x TBST for 1 h at RT and washed three times (5 min each) in 1x TBST.
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FIG. 1. Curli fibers are nonuniformly distributed on curli-producing cells. Negatively stained electron micrographs of MC4100 (WT) cells show the typical asymmetric display of curli fibers or absence of fibers on some cells. Bars, 500 nm.
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FIG. 2. CsgG is exposed to the cell surface. WT cells, csgG cells, and csgG cells containing plasmids encoding CsgG (csgG/pMC1) or CsgG with a C-terminal hexahistidine epitope (csgG/pMC2) were grown on YESCA plates for 48 h at 26°C. Equal numbers of intact or sonicated cells, as indicated, were spotted onto a nitrocellulose membrane before probing with anti-CsgG, anti-DsbA, or antihexahistidine epitope antibodies.
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FIG. 3. CsgG is spatially restricted in the outer membrane. (A and B) Typical images of cells obtained after anti-CsgG indirect immunofluorescence staining of the WT (A) or the isogenic csgG mutant (B). Shown are merged images of cells probed with rabbit anti-CsgG primary antibody and goat anti-rabbit secondary antibody conjugated to Alexa488 (green) and DAPI-stained nucleoid (blue). Bars, 12.5 µm. Quantification of the immunofluorescent foci is presented in Fig. 4B (see text). (C and D) Typical transmission EM images obtained after indirect immunogold labeling with 10-nm gold particles of WT cells probed with anti-CsgG antibodies (C) or without primary antibody (D), as described in Materials and Methods. Cells were grown on YESCA plates at 26°C for 40 h to induce curli expression. Bars, 200 nm.
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Surface-exposed CsgG is spatially dispersed in csg mutants. An intriguing aspect of curli biogenesis is the interdependence of protein stabilities between the csg operon-encoded proteins. For example, deletion of csgG or csgE results in decreased stability and secretion of CsgA and CsgB, and conversely, deletion of csgF results in augmented CsgA secretion and stability (8, 16, 21). Furthermore, overexpression studies showed that CsgG interacts with itself and with CsgA, CsgF, and CsgE at the outer membrane (28), although the molecular consequences of these interactions are unclear. Because several csg mutant phenotypes appear to converge at the step of secretion, we examined the spatial organization of CsgG at the outer membrane in different csg mutant backgrounds (Fig. 4). Each of the csg mutant strains examined displayed a dramatic decrease in the number of cells containing CsgG foci (Fig. 4A); 30.0% of WT cells had punctate anti-CsgG staining, compared to 7.2% of csgE, 3.6% of csgF, 2.1% of csgB, and 2.31% of csgA cells (Fig. 4B). We never observed a significant level of diffuse immunofluorescent signal in any of the WT or mutant cells, leading us to further investigate the cause of the loss of IFM signal. Despite the fewer number of CsgG punctate groups in the csg mutant strains compared to the WT, Western blotting indicated that WT and csg mutant strains had similar amounts of CsgG in the outer membrane, inner membrane, cytoplasm/periplasm, and whole-cell fractions (Fig. 4C and data not shown).
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FIG. 4. Spatial restriction of CsgG requires other csg-encoded proteins. (A) Typical images obtained after anti-CsgG IFM staining of csgE, csgF, csgB, or csgA cells grown on YESCA plates for 40 h at 26°C. Shown are merged images of cells stained with DAPI (blue) and Alexa488 anti-CsgG signal (green), although no cell-associated Alexa488 signal is evident. Bars, 12.5 µm. (B) Quantification of cell-associated foci after IFM staining. The percentage of cells with anti-CsgG immunofluorescence stain was determined for WT (1,191 cells examined), csgG (G–; 528 cells examined), csgE (E–; 553 cells examined), csgF (F–; 567 cells examined), csgB (B–; 549 cells examined), or csgA (A–; 329 cells examined) cells by counting the percentage of DAPI-stained cells colocalized with Alexa488 punctate dots. The standard error of the mean from three independent experiments is indicated above each bar in the graph. (C) WT or csgE cells were grown on YESCA plates for 48 h at 26°C, and cell fractions were prepared as described in Materials and Methods. Equal proportions of fractions containing whole cells (lane 1), high-speed supernatants containing cytosol and periplasm (lane 2), inner and outer membranes (lane 3), Sarkosyl-soluble inner membranes (lane 4), or Sarkosyl-insoluble outer membranes (lane 5) were resolved by SDS-PAGE before Western blotting with anti-CsgG antibodies. Similar results were seen for all csg mutant strains examined (data not shown). (D) WT, csgG, csgE, csgF, csgB, csgA, or csgBACcsgDEFG/pMC1 cells were grown on YESCA plates for 48 h at 26°C before equal an equal number of cells was spotted onto a nitrocellulose membrane and probed with anti-CsgG antibodies, as indicated. (E) Typical transmission EM image obtained after indirect immunogold labeling with 10-nm gold particles of csgA cells probed with anti-CsgG antibodies as described in Materials and Methods. Cells were grown on YESCA plates at 26°C for 40 h to induce expression of csgB and csgDEFG operons. Similar results were obtained with other csg mutant strains tested (see Results). Bar, 200 nm.
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Taken together, these results indicated that the CsgG produced in csgA, csgB, csgE, and csgF cells was spatially dispersed in the outer membrane and not localized into punctate clusters. We used anti-CsgG IEM to confirm this notion. We saw two distinct populations of csg mutant cells by IEM: some cells showed many anti-CsgG beads, while many cells had very few anti-CsgG beads or lacked gold beads altogether. A similar pattern was observed for WT cells (Fig. 3). As shown in Fig. 4E, anti-CsgG-directed gold beads, when present, were randomly distributed on the cell surface of csg mutant strains. Therefore, we conclude that csg-encoded proteins were required for spatial restriction of CsgG and that the loss of anti-CsgG IFM signal in the csg mutant strains was due to a more uniform spatial distribution of CsgG on the surface of the cells, which lowered the IFM signal intensity to below background levels.
CsgG multimers are resistant to denaturation with heat and detergent. Resistance to denaturation is a property of many outer membrane-localized multimeric complexes, and two distinct forms of assembly-dependent electrophoretic mobility have been described for outer membrane proteins (17, 27). We have previously shown that differently tagged CsgG constructs can copurify and coimmunoprecipitate when overexpressed in the same cell, suggesting that CsgG can interact with itself at the outer membrane (28). To examine the possibility that an assembly defect contributed to the loss of spatial clustering of CsgG expressed in the csg mutant strains, we examined the assembly status of CsgG in the various CsgG-expressing strains. WT and isogenic csgE, csgF, csgB, and csgA strains were grown on YESCA plates at 26°C for 48 h, and then CFS were prepared as described in Materials and Methods. Freshly prepared CFS was suspended in SDS sample buffer and incubated for 10 min at various temperatures between RT and 95°C before loading onto a discontinuous 5% to 8% SDS-polyacrylamide gel (Fig. 5). CsgG solubilized from WT cells migrated as a single high-molecular-mass species above the 170-kDa standard in the 8% resolving gel at temperatures of below 55°C (Fig. 5A and B, lanes 1 and 2; see Fig. S1A in the supplemental material). An intermediate-molecular-mass CsgG species that migrated between the 170- and 130-kDa standards was detected when WT samples were heated at temperatures greater than 55°C (Fig. 5A and B, lanes 3; see Fig. S1A in the supplemental material). The 30-kDa CsgG monomer was detected only when the samples were heated to 95°C for 10 min (Fig. 5A and B, lanes 4).
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FIG. 5. CsgG forms a detergent-stable high-molecular-weight multimer. MC4100 (WT) or isogenic csgG, csgE, csgF, csgA, and csgB mutant strains were grown on YESCA plates for 40 h at 26°C, and CFS were generated as described in Materials and Methods. Proteins were solubilized in 0.5% Elugent prior to being resuspended in 1x SDS loading buffer with 2-mercaptoethanol. Samples were incubated for 10 min at RT (lanes 1, 5, 6, and 10), 37°C (lanes 2, 7, and 11), 55°C (lanes 3, 8, and 12), or 95°C (lanes 4, 9, and 13) and electrophoresed by 5% to 8% discontinuous SDS-PAGE. The gel was transferred to a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane and probed with anti-CsgG antibodies.
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CsgG expressed from plasmid pMC1 in the csgBACcsgDEFG strain migrated predominately as the intermediate-molecular-mass species between the positions of the 170- and 130-kDa standards when incubated at temperatures of below 95°C, which suggested that an SDS-resistant CsgG species can assemble in the absence of all of the other csg-encoded proteins (see Fig. S1A, lanes 6 to 9, in the supplemental material). We next overexpressed CsgG in each of csg mutant strains to test whether variations in CsgG protein concentration could account for the shift in CsgG electrophoretic mobility in these strains. Overexpression of CsgG in any strain did not increase the amount of the high-molecular-mass CsgG species, although the intermediate-molecular-mass species accumulated (see Fig. S1B in the supplemental material and data not shown), raising the possibility that a stoichiometric relationship between CsgG and other proteins may be required for the stable production of the high-molecular-mass species. The presence of the intermediate-molecular-mass CsgG species in the absence of any or all csg proteins suggests that a CsgG oligomer can assemble independently of other curli biogenesis proteins but that the properties of this oligomer are distinct from those of the CsgG complexes formed in WT cells. These data also suggest that since CsgG expressed in the various csg mutant strains is spatially dispersed, the CsgG complex represented by the intermediate-molecular-mass species observed in the csg mutant strains is likewise dispersed in the outer membrane.
Fiber assembly is required for CsgG clustering.
Since we detected spatially restricted CsgG foci in curli-producing WT cells only, we investigated the relationship between fiber assembly and CsgG spatial restriction. Because CsgG clusters were absent from CsgG-expressing strains deficient in curlin secretion (csgE) or fiber assembly (csgE, csgB, csgA, and csgF), we reasoned that CsgA polymerization into curli fibers was essential for CsgG spatial localization. We examined CsgG clustering by IEM and IFM in csgA cells expressing CsgA or a CsgA mutant that was unable to polymerize into fibers. CsgA-
R1 is missing 23 residues that comprise the first of five CsgA amyloidogenic domains and is unable to polymerize into fibers after it is secreted from the cell (32) (Fig. 6B). When csgA cells were transformed with plasmid pCsgA-His expressing WT CsgA, 23% of 579 cells contained anti-CsgG foci by IFM (Fig. 6C, inset), and anti-CsgG-directed gold beads were clustered with curli fibers in csgA/pCsgA cells as observed with IEM (Fig. 6C). In contrast, only 10% of 567 csgA cells expressing CsgA-
R1-His displayed anti-CsgG foci and clusters by IFM and IEM (Fig. 6D). Therefore, curli subunit secretion alone is not sufficient to mediate CsgG clustering, and secretion must be accompanied by CsgA polymerization into a fiber for CsgG clusters to form.
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FIG. 6. Fiber polymerization is required for CsgG clustering. (A) Diagram of WT CsgA functional domains showing the N-terminal CsgG secretion signal (blue) and the five amyloid domains, R1 to R5. (B) Diagram of CsgA- R1, which lacks the first of five amyloid domains. (C and D) Typical transmission EM images obtained after indirect immunogold labeling with 10-nm gold particles of csgA cells expressing CsgA (C) or CsgA- R1 (D) probed with anti-CsgG antibodies as described in Materials and Methods. Cells were grown on YESCA plates at 26°C for 40 h to induce expression of csgB and csgDEFG operons. The insets show images obtained after anti-CsgG IFM staining of csgA/pCsgA cells (579 cells examined) or csgA/pCsgA- R1 cells (567 cells examined), as indicated, grown on YESCA plates for 46 h at 26°C. Shown are merged images of cells stained with DAPI (blue) and Alexa488 anti-CsgG signal (green). The percentage of cells examined which contained anti-CsgG foci in each strain is indicated.
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We found that CsgG formed SDS-resistant multimers and was clustered into spatially discrete foci that were exposed to the extracellular surface. Furthermore, we observed that curli fibers emanated from spatially discrete regions of WT cells (Fig. 1). Immunogold labeling revealed that CsgG was most abundant at the point(s) of the cell where curli emanated from the surface (Fig. 3). Additionally, we observed some binding of the gold-labeled anti-CsgG antibodies to the fibers themselves, suggesting that CsgG may become dislodged from the membrane during curli assembly. However, fiber-associated CsgG is likely only a minor fraction of the population, since CsgG-His is not recognized by an anti-His antibody added to the outside of cells (Fig. 2). The spatial restriction of CsgG into foci around curli fibers suggests a model where CsgA and CsgB fiber assembly is coordinated with CsgG spatial organization.
What mechanisms may be responsible for the clustering of CsgG around curli fibers? One possibility is that CsgG is spatially restricted prior to CsgA or CsgB secretion. In this scenario, CsgA and CsgB are secreted to the same location of the cell surface, perhaps facilitating the high efficiency of curli assembly. Another possibility is that CsgG is not restricted into foci until after secretion of CsgA and CsgB begins. The postsecretion aggregation of CsgA and CsgB into fibers may itself result in the clustering of CsgG around the fibers. Our data favor the later model. First, we did not observe spatially clustered CsgG foci in CsgG-expressing strains deficient in curlin secretion or curli assembly (Fig. 4). Further, CsgG foci were not evident when we transformed csgA cells with a plasmid encoding CsgA-
R1, a CsgA mutant protein that is stable and secreted but is defective in fiber assembly (32) (Fig. 6).
We also found that the loss of CsgE, CsgF, CsgA, or CsgB resulted in loss of spatially clustered CsgG foci, with little change in CsgG surface exposure or targeting to the outer membrane (Fig. 4). Stable CsgG oligomers likely form independently of other csg-encoded proteins, since slow-migrating SDS-resistant CsgG species were detected in all strains expressing CsgG (Fig. 5). However, the CsgG complexes formed in WT cells were slower migrating than the CsgG complexes observed in strains lacking CsgE, CsgF, CsgB, or CsgA (Fig. 5). Overexpression of CsgG in the absence of all of the csg proteins did not increase the relative amount of high-molecular-mass CsgG, as overexpressed CsgG migrated predominately as the intermediate-molecular-mass species (see Fig. S1 in the supplemental material). Therefore, some parameter besides CsgG concentration determines formation of the highest-molecular-mass species. Taken collectively, our data suggest two distinct phases of CsgG assembly and organization: (i) CsgG is targeted to the outer membrane and exposes the surface-accessible domain in the absence of any or all of the other csg-encoded proteins, and (ii) spatial restriction of CsgG into microdomains and assembly of the highest-molecular-mass CsgG complexes requires curli fiber polymerization supported by the other csg-encoded proteins. Since CsgG physically interacts with CsgE, CsgF, and CsgA (28), any or all of these proteins may contribute to CsgG spatial restriction. However, genetic analyses to determine exactly which of these CsgG-interacting proteins is required for either the assembly of CsgG multimers or spatial restriction of CsgG were difficult, as deletion of any single csg-encoded protein results in the loss of multiple other csg-encoded proteins from the cell surface (8, 16).
Previous results indicated that the N-terminal cysteine of CsgG was lipidated and that lipidation was required for the transport of CsgG to the outer membrane (21, 28). We showed that CsgG contained a domain exposed to the cell surface (Fig. 2), and a previous study indicated that CsgG had a periplasmic domain (21). Surface-exposed lipoproteins have been identified in several bacterial species, including Escherichia, Klebsiella, and Neisseria spp. Membrane-spanning lipoprotein translocons are not unprecedented. For example, the lipoprotein Wza is an E. coli polysaccharide translocon that spans the outer membrane (11). CsgG and Wza are topologically similar, as both have periplasmic and surface-exposed domains (Fig. 2) (11, 21), and are also functionally similar, as both have been implicated as conduits for secretion across the outer membrane (10, 28). Importantly, CsgG lacks any apparent amino acid sequence similarity with either Wza or any other family of proteins (data not shown), and the architecture of the CsgG membrane-spanning domain(s) remains unclear. Future exploration of the domain architecture of CsgG and definition of the residues governing the contacts between CsgG and its many interacting proteins will help clarify the biology of this unique lipoprotein.
One outstanding question about the biosynthesis of functional amyloids is how cells control amyloid fiber aggregation without any apparent cellular toxicity. In the curli biogenesis system, the activities of nucleation and polymerization are separated into two different proteins, CsgB and CsgA, respectively. This suggests that the cell can avoid unregulated fiber polymerization by keeping CsgA and CsgB separated until they reach the cell surface. The fiber-dependent spatial clustering of CsgG suggests an elegant mechanism to regulate the segregation of CsgA and CsgB: only when the csg-encoded proteins interact with CsgG do spatial restriction and CsgA and CsgB interaction occur. These results support a model where CsgG is the center of a curli assembly platform, although very little is known about the molecular nature of the protein-protein interactions that facilitate CsgG ultrastructural changes. In particular, the mechanisms preventing CsgA and CsgB amyloid assembly on the periplasmic face of the spatially restricted assembly complex remain to be elucidated. Clarification of how the curli assembly platform forms will help further unravel the mechanism of coordinated curli amyloid biogenesis.
We thank James Bardwell and members of his laboratory for the anti-DsbA antibody and for the dsbA deletion strain (JP120) used for Fig. 2. Many thanks are also due to Amy Chang and members of her laboratory for their generous and frequent accommodation of our many hours of use of their Olympus microscope. We acknowledge members of the Chapman lab and the lab of Robert Bender for critical evaluation of the manuscript and many helpful discussions, Xuan Wang for technical advice and assistance with electron microscopy, Yizhou Zhou for help with microscopy, and Ryan Frisch for the preimmune rabbit IgG used as a control in IFM and dot blotting.
Published ahead of print on 14 November 2008. ![]()
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://jb.asm.org/. ![]()
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