Hierarchical determinants in cytotoxic necrotizing factor (CNF) toxins driving Rho G-protein deamidation versus transglutamination

Nicholas B. Handy, Yiting Xu, Damee Moon, Jacob J. Sowizral, Eric Moon, Mengfei Ho, Brenda A. Wilson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The cytotoxic necrotizing factor (CNF) family of AB-type bacterial protein toxins catalyze two types of modification on their Rho GTPase substrates: deamidation and transglutamination. It has been established that E. coli CNF1 and its close homolog proteins catalyze primarily deamidation and Bordetella dermonecrotic toxin (DNT) catalyzes primarily transglutamination. The rapidly expanding microbial genome sequencing data have revealed that there are at least 13 full-length variants of CNF1 homologs. CNFx from E. coli strain GN02091 is the most distant from all other members of the CNF family with 50%–55% sequence identity at the protein level and 0.45–0.52 nucleotide substitutions per site at the DNA level. CNFx modifies RhoA, Rac1, and Cdc42, and like CNF1, activates downstream SRE-dependent mitogenic signaling pathways in human HEK293T cells, but at a 1,000-fold higher EC 50 value. Unlike other previously characterized CNF toxins, CNFx modifies Rho proteins primarily through transglutamination, as evidenced by gel-shift assay and confirmed by MALDI mass spectral analysis, when coexpressed with Rho-protein substrates in E. coli BL21 cells or through direct treatment of HEK293T cells. A comparison of CNF1 and CNFx sequences identified two critical active-site residues corresponding to positions 832 and 862 in CNF1. Reciprocal site-specific mutations at these residues in each toxin revealed hierarchical rules that define the preference for deamidase versus a transglutaminase activity in CNFs. An additional unique Cys residue at the C-terminus of CNFx was also discovered to be critical for retarding cargo delivery.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbere01221-24
Pages (from-to)e0122124
JournalmBio
Volume15
Issue number7
Early online dateJun 26 2024
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 17 2024

Keywords

  • bacterial toxin
  • mammalian signaling
  • G proteins
  • protein structure-function
  • substrate specificity
  • enzyme reaction
  • Escherichia coli
  • toxin evolution

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Microbiology
  • Virology

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