Molecular mechanism for the subversion of the retromer coat by the Legionella effector RidL
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Romano-Moreno, Miguel; Rojas, Adriana L.; Williamson, Chad D.; Gershlick, David C.; Lucas Gay, María
Fecha
2017Derechos
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
Publicado en
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017 Dec 26;114(52):E11151-E11160.
Editorial
National Academy of Sciences
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Palabras clave
Pathogenic Bacteria
Membrane Targeting
Coat Complex
Legionella Effector
X-Ray Crystallography
Resumen/Abstract
Microbial pathogens employ sophisticated virulence strategies to
cause infections in humans. The intracellular pathogen Legionella
pneumophila encodes RidL to hijack the host scaffold protein
VPS29, a component of retromer and retriever complexes critical for
endosomal cargo recycling. Here, we determined the crystal structure
of L. pneumophila RidL in complex with the human VPS29?VPS35
retromer subcomplex. A hairpin loop protruding from RidL inserts
into a conserved pocket on VPS29 that is also used by cellular ligands,
such as Tre-2/Bub2/Cdc16 domain family member 5 (TBC1D5) and
VPS9-ankyrin repeat protein for VPS29 binding. Consistent with the
idea of molecular mimicry in protein interactions, RidL outcompeted
TBC1D5 for binding to VPS29. Furthermore, the interaction of RidL
with retromer did not interfere with retromer dimerization but was
essential for association of RidL with retromer-coated vacuolar and
tubular endosomes. Our work thus provides structural and mechanistic
evidence into how RidL is targeted to endosomal membranes.
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