Tly linked major pilin proteins, resulting in a shaft. In addition, some pili, but not all, have minor pilin proteins incorporated into the stalk. In general, an adhesin is positioned at the tip. The recent advances in structure and function of Grampositive pili are excellently reviewed by Kang and Baker [16]. Gram-positive proteins that function as building blocks for pili polymerization share some common characteristics. There is a signal peptide located in the N-terminus and an LPXTG motif in the C-terminus, followed by a transmembrane segment. The LPXTG motif is a sorting signal recognized by a sortase (a cysteine transpeptidase) that cleaves the protein between the threonine and the glycine in the motif. In the next step the threonine is covalently attached either to the cell-wall peptidoglycan if the sortase is a housekeeping sortase or to a lysine of a central pilin motif (WXXXVXVYPK) [17] of an identical pilin protein if a polymerization reaction is being inhibitor catalyzed. The covalent polymerization of pilin proteins is performed by pili-specific sortases. The mechanism underlying the incorporation of auxiliary proteins into the fimbria is still not fully understood [18,19,20]. Dental plaque is a microbial biofilm built up from several hundreds of different bacterial species [21]. Actinomyces spp together with streptococci are among the first colonizers of the oral biofilm and promote further biofilm formation by their interaction with a wide variety of proteins and carbohydrates on microorganisms and host cells, or from saliva. A. oris (previously Actinomyces naeslundii genospecies 2 [22]) can express two different types of pili: type-1 and type-2. Type-1 pili mediate the first attachment to host salivary proline-rich proteins (PRPs) that coat the tooth, whereas type-2 pili mediate attachment to carbohydrate structures on oral streptococci [23,24] and host cells [25]. The two types of pili are encoded by two separate gene clusters. Each gene cluster contains three genes that encode a large putative adhesin, the pilus shaft protein and the pili-specific sortase. The encoded pilin proteins are as follows: FimQ, FimP and SrtC-1 for type-1 and FimA, FimB and SrtC-2 for type-2 [26,27]. The pilus shaft proteins FimP and FimA are 28 identical in sequence and are very similar in size. The sortases SrtC-1 and SrtC-2 share 42 sequence identity within the enzymatic domain. In contrast, the putative adhesins differ in both size and sequence (1413 residues for FimQ and 976 residues for FimB). This may reflect their differences in binding specificity. Intriguingly, it was recently shown for type-2 pili that the pili stalk alone (FimA) is involved in the co-aggregation reaction with carbohydrates [28] which leaves the function of FimB unclear. However, in a similar study on the type-1 pili it was shown that the presumed adhesin, FimQ, did indeed interact with PRPs and thatFimP Structure and Sequence Analysesthe shaft protein FimP appeared not to be involved in this interaction [29]. To unravel some of the basics of the Epigenetics molecular function of 16574785 these pili it is necessary to study the molecular organization of the participating proteins. Recently the crystal structure of the carboxy-terminal fragment of A. oris FimA was presented [5] as well as the crystal structure of the FimP-specific sortase SrtC-1 [30]. To gain more insight into the structure and function of the A. oris type-1 pili, we have solved the structure of ?the FimP shaft protein, refined.Tly linked major pilin proteins, resulting in a shaft. In addition, some pili, but not all, have minor pilin proteins incorporated into the stalk. In general, an adhesin is positioned at the tip. The recent advances in structure and function of Grampositive pili are excellently reviewed by Kang and Baker [16]. Gram-positive proteins that function as building blocks for pili polymerization share some common characteristics. There is a signal peptide located in the N-terminus and an LPXTG motif in the C-terminus, followed by a transmembrane segment. The LPXTG motif is a sorting signal recognized by a sortase (a cysteine transpeptidase) that cleaves the protein between the threonine and the glycine in the motif. In the next step the threonine is covalently attached either to the cell-wall peptidoglycan if the sortase is a housekeeping sortase or to a lysine of a central pilin motif (WXXXVXVYPK) [17] of an identical pilin protein if a polymerization reaction is being catalyzed. The covalent polymerization of pilin proteins is performed by pili-specific sortases. The mechanism underlying the incorporation of auxiliary proteins into the fimbria is still not fully understood [18,19,20]. Dental plaque is a microbial biofilm built up from several hundreds of different bacterial species [21]. Actinomyces spp together with streptococci are among the first colonizers of the oral biofilm and promote further biofilm formation by their interaction with a wide variety of proteins and carbohydrates on microorganisms and host cells, or from saliva. A. oris (previously Actinomyces naeslundii genospecies 2 [22]) can express two different types of pili: type-1 and type-2. Type-1 pili mediate the first attachment to host salivary proline-rich proteins (PRPs) that coat the tooth, whereas type-2 pili mediate attachment to carbohydrate structures on oral streptococci [23,24] and host cells [25]. The two types of pili are encoded by two separate gene clusters. Each gene cluster contains three genes that encode a large putative adhesin, the pilus shaft protein and the pili-specific sortase. The encoded pilin proteins are as follows: FimQ, FimP and SrtC-1 for type-1 and FimA, FimB and SrtC-2 for type-2 [26,27]. The pilus shaft proteins FimP and FimA are 28 identical in sequence and are very similar in size. The sortases SrtC-1 and SrtC-2 share 42 sequence identity within the enzymatic domain. In contrast, the putative adhesins differ in both size and sequence (1413 residues for FimQ and 976 residues for FimB). This may reflect their differences in binding specificity. Intriguingly, it was recently shown for type-2 pili that the pili stalk alone (FimA) is involved in the co-aggregation reaction with carbohydrates [28] which leaves the function of FimB unclear. However, in a similar study on the type-1 pili it was shown that the presumed adhesin, FimQ, did indeed interact with PRPs and thatFimP Structure and Sequence Analysesthe shaft protein FimP appeared not to be involved in this interaction [29]. To unravel some of the basics of the molecular function of 16574785 these pili it is necessary to study the molecular organization of the participating proteins. Recently the crystal structure of the carboxy-terminal fragment of A. oris FimA was presented [5] as well as the crystal structure of the FimP-specific sortase SrtC-1 [30]. To gain more insight into the structure and function of the A. oris type-1 pili, we have solved the structure of ?the FimP shaft protein, refined.
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