Fimbrial usher protein

Fimbrial Usher protein

Structure of the type 1 pilus assembly platform FimD(25-139).[1]
Identifiers
Symbol Usher
Pfam PF00577
InterPro IPR000015
PROSITE PDOC00886
TCDB 1.B.11
OPM superfamily 208
OPM protein 2vqi

The fimbrial usher protein is involved in biogenesis of the pilus in Gram-negative bacteria. The biogenesis of fimbriae (or pili) requires a two-component assembly and transport system which is composed of a periplasmic chaperone and an outer membrane protein which has been termed a molecular 'usher'.[2][3][4]

The usher protein has a molecular weight ranging from 86 to 100 kDa and is composed of a membrane-spanning 24-stranded beta barrel domain, reminiscent of porins, and of four periplasmic soluble domains: an N-terminal one of about 120 residues (NTD),[1] a 'middle' domain of about 80 residues[5] located as a soluble insertion within the beta barrel region of the sequence (plug domain) and two IG-like domains (each about 80 residues long) at the C-terminus (CTD1 and CTD2).[6] Although the degree of sequence similarity of these proteins is not very high they share a number of characteristics. One of these is the presence of two pairs of disulfide bond-forming cysteines, the first one located in the NTD and the second in CTD2. The best conserved region of the sequence corresponds to the plug domain.

References

  1. 1 2 Nishiyama M, Horst R, Eidam O, et al. (June 2005). "Structural basis of chaperone–subunit complex recognition by the type 1 pilus assembly platform FimD". EMBO J. 24 (12): 2075–86. doi:10.1038/sj.emboj.7600693. PMC 1150887Freely accessible. PMID 15920478.
  2. Hultgren SJ, Jacob-Dubuisson F, Striker R (1994). "Chaperone-assisted self-assembly of pili independent of cellular energy". J. Biol. Chem. 269 (17): 12447–12455. PMID 7909802.
  3. Schifferli DM, Alrutz MA (1994). "Permissive linker insertion sites in the outer membrane protein of 987P fimbriae of Escherichia coli". J. Bacteriol. 176 (4): 1099–1110. PMC 205162Freely accessible. PMID 7906265.
  4. Saier Jr MH, Van Rosmalen M (1993). "Structural and evolutionary relationships between two families of bacterial extracytoplasmic chaperone proteins which function cooperatively in fimbrial assembly". Res. Microbiol. 144 (7): 507–527. doi:10.1016/0923-2508(93)90001-I. PMID 7906046.
  5. Capitani G, Eidam O, Grütter MG (2006) Evidence for a novel domain of bacterial outer membrane ushers. Proteins 65 (4):816-23. doi:10.1002/prot.21147 PMID 17066380
  6. Phan G, Remaut H, Wang T, Allen WJ, Pirker KF, Lebedev A et al. (2011) Crystal structure of the FimD usher bound to its cognate FimC-FimH substrate. Nature 474 (7349):49-53. doi:10.1038/nature10109 PMID 21637253

This article incorporates text from the public domain Pfam and InterPro IPR000015

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