» Articles » PMID: 12207700

Agrobacterium Type IV Secretion is a Two-step Process in Which Export Substrates Associate with the Virulence Protein VirJ in the Periplasm

Overview
Journal Mol Microbiol
Date 2002 Sep 5
PMID 12207700
Citations 23
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Type IV secretion systems are virulence determinants in many bacteria and share extensive homology with many conjugal transfer systems. Although type IV systems and their homologues have been studied widely, the mechanism by which substrates are secreted remains unclear. In Agrobacterium, we show that type IV secretion substrates that lack signal peptides form a soluble complex in the periplasm with the virulence protein VirJ. Additionally, these proteins co-precipitate with constituents of the type IV transporter: the VirB pilus and the VirD4 protein. Our findings suggest that the substrate proteins localized to the periplasm may associate with the pilus in a manner that is mediated by VirJ, and suggest a two-step process for type IV secretion in Agrobacterium. Our analyses of protein-protein interactions in a variety of mutant backgrounds indicate that substrates are probably secreted independently of one another.

Citing Articles

The Passage of Chaperonins to Extracellular Locations in Requires a Functional Dot/Icm System.

Robertson P, Allan D, Garduno R Biomolecules. 2025; 15(1).

PMID: 39858485 PMC: 11763710. DOI: 10.3390/biom15010091.


VirJ Is a Brucella Virulence Factor Involved in the Secretion of Type IV Secreted Substrates.

Del Giudice M, Dohmer P, Spera J, Laporte F, Marchesini M, Czibener C J Biol Chem. 2016; 291(23):12383-93.

PMID: 27059960 PMC: 4933284. DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M116.730994.


Diversity of secretion systems associated with virulence characteristics of the classical bordetellae.

Park J, Zhang Y, Chen C, Dudley E, Harvill E Microbiology (Reading). 2015; 161(12):2328-40.

PMID: 26459829 PMC: 5410106. DOI: 10.1099/mic.0.000197.


Agrobacterium: nature's genetic engineer.

Nester E Front Plant Sci. 2015; 5:730.

PMID: 25610442 PMC: 4285021. DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2014.00730.


Identification of a novel conjugative plasmid in mycobacteria that requires both type IV and type VII secretion.

Ummels R, Abdallah A, Kuiper V, Aajoud A, Sparrius M, Naeem R mBio. 2014; 5(5):e01744-14.

PMID: 25249284 PMC: 4173767. DOI: 10.1128/mBio.01744-14.