Edqvist PJ, Olsson J, Lavander M, Sundberg L, Forsberg A, Wolf-Watz H, Lloyd SA.
YscP and YscU regulate substrate specificity of the Yersinia type III secretion system.
J Bacteriol. 2003 Apr;185(7):2259-66
Abstract:
Pathogenic Yersinia species use a type III secretion system to inhibit
phagocytosis by eukaryotic cells. At 37 degrees C, the secretion system
is assembled, forming a needle-like structure on the bacterial cell
surface. Upon eukaryotic cell contact, six effector proteins, called
Yops, are translocated into the eukaryotic cell cytosol. Here, we show
that a yscP mutant exports an increased amount of the needle component
YscF to the bacterial cell surface but is unable to efficiently secrete
effector Yops. Mutations in the cytoplasmic domain of the inner
membrane protein YscU suppress the yscP phenotype by reducing the level
of YscF secretion and increasing the level of Yop secretion. These
results suggest that YscP and YscU coordinately regulate the substrate
specificity of the Yersinia type III secretion system. Furthermore, we
show that YscP and YscU act upstream of the cell contact sensor YopN as
well as the inner gatekeeper LcrG in the pathway of substrate export
regulation. These results further strengthen the strong evolutionary
link between flagellar biosynthesis and type III synthesis.
DOI-Link
YscP and YscU regulate substrate specificity of the Yersinia type III secretion system
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