Communications Biology (Aug 2024)

A Clostridioides difficile endolysin modulates toxin secretion without cell lysis

  • Milena M. Awad,
  • Chathura D. Suraweera,
  • Callum J. Vidor,
  • Auberon Y. Ye-Lin,
  • Galain C. Williams,
  • Steven J. Mileto,
  • Christopher K. Barlow,
  • Sheena McGowan,
  • Dena Lyras

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-024-06730-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

Read online

Abstract The Clostridia produce and secrete Large Clostridial Glucosylating Toxins (LCGTs) responsible for disease symptoms, but the secretion mechanism is largely unknown. Recently, a holin-like protein was shown to be essential for toxin secretion. Holins, typically bacteriophage-specific proteins, are part of the holin-endo(lysin) system that releases phage progeny. To determine if the clostridia also use a lysin, we investigated two conserved putative lysins, M7404_01910 and M7404_02200, in the release of the LCGTs TcdA and TcdB from a Clostridioides difficile ribotype 027 strain, M7404. Sequence analysis and structural modelling indicates that both proteins are related to N-acetylmuramoyl-l-alanine amidases, similar to CD27L, a lysin from the C. difficile phage ΦCD27. Disruption of these genes reveal that only M7404_02200 contributes to toxin secretion and does so in a non-lytic fashion. Peptidoglycan hydrolysis assays show that recombinant M7404_02200 is an active peptidoglycan amidase, confirming its role in TcdA and TcdB secretion in C. difficile M7404.