@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref24800,
author = {Jes?s A Arenas and Vincent de Maat and Laura Cat?n and Massis Krekorian and Juan Cruz Herrero and Flavio Ferrera and Jan Tommassen},
title = {Fratricide activity of MafB protein of N. meningitidis strain B16B6 },
year = {2015},
keywords = {Adhesin, anti-toxin, contact-dependent growth inhibition, MafB, Neisseria meningitidis, toxin, Two-partner secretion},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {BMC microbiology},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Background
Neisseria meningitidis is an inhabitant of the mucosal surfaces of the human
nasopharynx. We recently demonstrated that the secreted meningococcal Two-partner
secretion protein A (TpsA) is involved in interbacterial competition. The C-terminal end
of the large TpsA protein contains a small toxic domain that inhibits the growth of target
bacteria. The producing cells are protected from this toxic activity by a small immunity
protein that is encoded by the gene immediately downstream of the tpsA gene. Further
downstream on the chromosome, a repertoire of toxic modules, designated tpsC
cassettes, is encoded that could replace the toxic module of TpsA by recombination.
Each tpsC cassette is associated with a gene encoding a cognate immunity protein.
Results
Blast searchers using the toxic domains of TpsA and TpsC proteins as queries
identified homologies with the C-terminal part of neisserial MafB proteins, which, for the
rest, showed no sequence similarity to TpsA proteins. On the chromosome, mafB
genes are part of genomic islands, which include cassettes for additional toxic modules
as well as genes putatively encoding immunity proteins. We demonstrate that a MafB
protein of strain B16B6 inhibits the growth of a strain that does not produce the
corresponding immunity protein. Assays in E. coli confirmed that the C-terminal region
of MafB is responsible for toxicity, which is inhibited by the cognate immunity protein.
Pull-down assays revealed direct interaction between MafB toxic domains and the
cognate immunity proteins.
Conclusions
The meningococcal MafB proteins are novel toxic proteins involved in interbacterial
competition.}
}
Trees for Study 17890

Citation title:
"Fratricide activity of MafB protein of N. meningitidis strain B16B6 ".

Study name:
"Fratricide activity of MafB protein of N. meningitidis strain B16B6 ".

This study is part of submission 17890
(Status: Published).
Trees