Contact‐dependent growth inhibition requires the essential outer membrane protein BamA (YaeT) as the receptor and the inner membrane transport protein AcrB

Stephanie K. Aoki(University of California, Santa Barbara), Juliana C. Malinverni(Princeton University), Kyle Jacoby(University of California, Santa Barbara), Benjamin Thomas(University of California, Santa Barbara), Rupinderjit Pamma(University of California, Santa Barbara), Brooke Trinh(University of California, Santa Barbara), Susan Remers(University of California, Santa Barbara), Julia Webb(University of California, Santa Barbara), Bruce A. Braaten(University of California, Santa Barbara), Thomas J. Silhavy(Princeton University), David A. Low(University of California, Santa Barbara)
Molecular Microbiology
August 22, 2008
Cited by 191Open Access
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Abstract

Contact-dependent growth inhibition (CDI) is a phenomenon by which bacterial cell growth is regulated by direct cell-to-cell contact via the CdiA/CdiB two-partner secretion system. Characterization of mutants resistant to CDI allowed us to identify BamA (YaeT) as the outer membrane receptor for CDI and AcrB as a potential downstream target. Notably, both BamA and AcrB are part of distinct multi-component machines. The Bam machine assembles outer membrane beta-barrel proteins into the outer membrane and the Acr machine exports small molecules into the extracellular milieu. We discovered that a mutation that reduces expression of BamA decreased binding of CDI+ inhibitor cells, measured by flow cytometry with fluorescently labelled bacteria. In addition, alpha-BamA antibodies, which recognized extracellular epitopes of BamA based on immunofluorescence, specifically blocked inhibitor-target cells binding and CDI. A second class of CDI-resistant mutants identified carried null mutations in the acrB gene. AcrB is an inner membrane component of a multidrug efflux pump that normally forms a cell envelope-spanning complex with the membrane fusion protein AcrA and the outer membrane protein TolC. Strikingly, the requirement for the BamA and AcrB proteins in CDI is independent of their multi-component machines, and thus their role in the CDI pathway may reflect novel, import-related functions.


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