Arginine glycosylation enhances methylglyoxal detoxification

Abstract Type III secretion system effector proteins have primarily been characterized for their interactions with host cell proteins and their ability to disrupt host signaling pathways. We are testing the hypothesis that some effectors are active within the bacterium, where they modulate bacterial...

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Main Authors: Samir El Qaidi, Nichollas E. Scott, Philip R. Hardwidge
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-02-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-83437-0
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spelling doaj-c9fd04c2a13f4bf293ff61a5d83631322021-02-21T12:34:10ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-02-0111111110.1038/s41598-021-83437-0Arginine glycosylation enhances methylglyoxal detoxificationSamir El Qaidi0Nichollas E. Scott1Philip R. Hardwidge2College of Veterinary Medicine, Kansas State UniversityDepartment of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Melbourne Within the Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and ImmunityCollege of Veterinary Medicine, Kansas State UniversityAbstract Type III secretion system effector proteins have primarily been characterized for their interactions with host cell proteins and their ability to disrupt host signaling pathways. We are testing the hypothesis that some effectors are active within the bacterium, where they modulate bacterial signal transduction and physiology. We previously determined that the Citrobacter rodentium effector NleB possesses an intra-bacterial glycosyltransferase activity that increases glutathione synthetase activity to protect the bacterium from oxidative stress. Here we investigated the potential intra-bacterial activities of NleB orthologs in Salmonella enterica and found that SseK1 and SseK3 mediate resistance to methylglyoxal. SseK1 glycosylates specific arginine residues on four proteins involved in methylglyoxal detoxification, namely GloA (R9), GloB (R190), GloC (R160), and YajL (R149). SseK1-mediated Arg-glycosylation of these four proteins significantly enhances their catalytic activity, thus providing another important example of the intra-bacterial activities of type three secretion system effector proteins. These data are also the first demonstration that a Salmonella T3SS effector is active within the bacterium.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-83437-0
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Samir El Qaidi
Nichollas E. Scott
Philip R. Hardwidge
spellingShingle Samir El Qaidi
Nichollas E. Scott
Philip R. Hardwidge
Arginine glycosylation enhances methylglyoxal detoxification
Scientific Reports
author_facet Samir El Qaidi
Nichollas E. Scott
Philip R. Hardwidge
author_sort Samir El Qaidi
title Arginine glycosylation enhances methylglyoxal detoxification
title_short Arginine glycosylation enhances methylglyoxal detoxification
title_full Arginine glycosylation enhances methylglyoxal detoxification
title_fullStr Arginine glycosylation enhances methylglyoxal detoxification
title_full_unstemmed Arginine glycosylation enhances methylglyoxal detoxification
title_sort arginine glycosylation enhances methylglyoxal detoxification
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Abstract Type III secretion system effector proteins have primarily been characterized for their interactions with host cell proteins and their ability to disrupt host signaling pathways. We are testing the hypothesis that some effectors are active within the bacterium, where they modulate bacterial signal transduction and physiology. We previously determined that the Citrobacter rodentium effector NleB possesses an intra-bacterial glycosyltransferase activity that increases glutathione synthetase activity to protect the bacterium from oxidative stress. Here we investigated the potential intra-bacterial activities of NleB orthologs in Salmonella enterica and found that SseK1 and SseK3 mediate resistance to methylglyoxal. SseK1 glycosylates specific arginine residues on four proteins involved in methylglyoxal detoxification, namely GloA (R9), GloB (R190), GloC (R160), and YajL (R149). SseK1-mediated Arg-glycosylation of these four proteins significantly enhances their catalytic activity, thus providing another important example of the intra-bacterial activities of type three secretion system effector proteins. These data are also the first demonstration that a Salmonella T3SS effector is active within the bacterium.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-83437-0
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AT philiprhardwidge arginineglycosylationenhancesmethylglyoxaldetoxification
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