Pathogens (Dec 2022)

14-3-3 Activated Bacterial Exotoxins AexT and ExoT Share Actin and the SH2 Domains of CRK Proteins as Targets for ADP-Ribosylation

  • Carmen Ebenwaldner,
  • Peter Hornyak,
  • Antonio Ginés García-Saura,
  • Archimede Torretta,
  • Saber Anoosheh,
  • Anders Hofer,
  • Herwig Schüler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens11121497
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 12
p. 1497

Abstract

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Bacterial exotoxins with ADP-ribosyltransferase activity can be divided into distinct clades based on their domain organization. Exotoxins from several clades are known to modify actin at Arg177; but of the 14-3-3 dependent exotoxins only Aeromonas salmonicida exoenzyme T (AexT) has been reported to ADP-ribosylate actin. Given the extensive similarity among the 14-3-3 dependent exotoxins, we initiated a structural and biochemical comparison of these proteins. Structural modeling of AexT indicated a target binding site that shared homology with Pseudomonas aeruginosa Exoenzyme T (ExoT) but not with Exoenzyme S (ExoS). Biochemical analyses confirmed that the catalytic activities of both exotoxins were stimulated by agmatine, indicating that they ADP-ribosylate arginine residues in their targets. Side-by-side comparison of target protein modification showed that AexT had activity toward the SH2 domain of the Crk-like protein (CRKL), a known target for ExoT. We found that both AexT and ExoT ADP-ribosylated actin and in both cases, the modification compromised actin polymerization. Our results indicate that AexT and ExoT are functional homologs that affect cytoskeletal integrity via actin and signaling pathways to the cytoskeleton.

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