Yersinia virulence depends on mimicry of host Rho-family nucleotide dissociation inhibitors.

Article Details

Citation

Prehna G, Ivanov MI, Bliska JB, Stebbins CE

Yersinia virulence depends on mimicry of host Rho-family nucleotide dissociation inhibitors.

Cell. 2006 Sep 8;126(5):869-80.

PubMed ID
16959567 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Yersinia spp. cause gastroenteritis and the plague, representing historically devastating pathogens that are currently an important biodefense and antibiotic resistance concern. A critical virulence determinant is the Yersinia protein kinase A, or YpkA, a multidomain protein that disrupts the eukaryotic actin cytoskeleton. Here we solve the crystal structure of a YpkA-Rac1 complex and find that YpkA possesses a Rac1 binding domain that mimics host guanidine nucleotide dissociation inhibitors (GDIs) of the Rho GTPases. YpkA inhibits nucleotide exchange in Rac1 and RhoA, and mutations that disrupt the YpkA-GTPase interface abolish this activity in vitro and impair in vivo YpkA-induced cytoskeletal disruption. In cell culture experiments, the kinase and the GDI domains of YpkA act synergistically to promote cytoskeletal disruption, and a Y. pseudotuberculosis mutant lacking YpkA GDI activity shows attenuated virulence in a mouse infection assay. We conclude that virulence in Yersinia depends strongly upon mimicry of host GDI proteins by YpkA.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Ras-related C3 botulinum toxin substrate 1P63000Details