bioRxiv | 2021

In Situ Visualization of the pKM101-Encoded Type IV Secretion System Reveals a Highly Symmetric ATPase Energy Center

 
 
 
 

Abstract


Bacterial conjugation systems are members of the type IV secretion system (T4SS) superfamily. T4SSs can be classified as ‘minimized’ or ‘expanded’ based on whether they are composed of a core set of signature subunits or additional system-specific components. Prototypical ‘minimized’ systems mediating Agrobacterium tumefaciens T-DNA transfer and pKM101 and R388 plasmid transfer are built from subunits generically named VirB1-VirB11 and VirD4. We visualized the pKM101-encoded T4SS in the native cellular context by in situ cryoelectron tomography (CryoET). The T4SSpKM101 is composed of an outer membrane core complex (OMCC) connected by a thin stalk to an inner membrane complex (IMC). The OMCC exhibits 14-fold symmetry and resembles that of the T4SSR388 analyzed previously by single-particle electron microscopy. The IMC is highly symmetrical and exhibits 6-fold symmetry. It is dominated by a hexameric collar in the periplasm and a cytoplasmic complex composed of a hexamer of dimers of the VirB4-like TraB ATPase. The IMC closely resembles equivalent regions of three ‘expanded’ T4SSs previously visualized by in situ CryoET, but differs strikingly from the IMC of the purified T4SSR388 whose cytoplasmic complex instead presents as two side-by-side VirB4 hexamers. Analyses of mutant machines lacking each of the three ATPases required for T4SSpKM101 function supplied evidence that TraBB4 as well as VirB11-like TraG contribute to distinct stages of machine assembly. We propose that the VirB4-like ATPases, configured as hexamers-of-dimers at the T4SS entrance, orchestrate IMC assembly and recruitment of the spatially-dynamic VirB11 and VirD4 ATPases to activate the T4SS for substrate transfer. SIGNIFICANCE Bacterial type IV secretion systems (T4SSs) play central roles in antibiotic resistance spread and virulence. By cryoelectron tomography (CryoET), we solved the structure of the plasmid pKM101-encoded T4SS in the native context of the bacterial cell envelope. The inner membrane complex (IMC) of the in situ T4SS differs remarkably from that of a closely-related T4SS analyzed in vitro by single particle electron microscopy. Our findings underscore the importance of comparative in vitro and in vivo analyses of the T4SS nanomachines, and support a unified model in which the signature VirB4 ATPases of the T4SS superfamily function as a central hexamer of dimers to regulate early-stage machine biogenesis and substrate entry passage through the T4SS. The VirB4 ATPases are therefore excellent targets for development of intervention strategies aimed at suppressing the action of T4SS nanomachines.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1101/2021.08.19.457048
Language English
Journal bioRxiv

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