Yeast can express and assemble bacterial secretins in the mitochondrial outer membrane

Microb Cell. 2019 Nov 19;7(1):15-27. doi: 10.15698/mic2020.01.703.

Abstract

Secretins form large multimeric pores in the outer membrane (OM) of Gram-negative bacteria. These pores are part of type II and III secretion systems (T2SS and T3SS, respectively) and are crucial for pathogenicity. Recent structural studies indicate that secretins form a structure rich in β-strands. However, little is known about the mechanism by which secretins assemble into the OM. Based on the conservation of the biogenesis of β-barrel proteins in bacteria and mitochondria, we used yeast cells as a model system to study the assembly process of secretins. To that end, we analyzed the biogenesis of PulD (T2SS), SsaC (T3SS) and InvG (T3SS) in wild type cells or in cells mutated for known mitochondrial import and assembly factors. Our results suggest that secretins can be expressed in yeast cells, where they are enriched in the mitochondrial fraction. Interestingly, deletion of mitochondrial import receptors like Tom20 and Tom70 reduces the mitochondrial association of PulD but does not affect that of InvG. SsaC shows another dependency pattern and its membrane assembly is enhanced by the absence of Tom70 and compromised in cells lacking Tom20 or the topogenesis of outer membrane β-barrel proteins (TOB) complex component, Mas37. Collectively, these findings suggest that various secretins can follow different pathways to assemble into the bacterial OM.

Keywords: InvG; PulD; Secretins; SsaC; mitochondria; outer membrane; protein sorting.

Grants and funding

We thank Elena Kracker, Lara Sophie Rieder, Dr. Tobias Jores, and Dr. Thomas Ulrich for their technical help. We would like to thank Dr. Antony P. Pugsley for constructs of bacterial secretins and an antibody against PulD. This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (SFB766/B11 to D.R.).