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Type VI secretion system

The type VI secretion system (T6SS) is a mechanism that is commonly used by pathogenic bacteria to infect host cells and for survival in competitive environments. This system assembles on a core baseplate and elongates like a phage puncturing device; it is thought to penetrate the target membrane and deliver effectors into the host or competing bacteria. Valine-glycine repeat protein G1 (VgrG1) forms the spike at the tip of the elongating tube formed by haemolysin co-regulated protein 1 (Hcp1); it is structurally similar to the T4 phage (gp27)3-(gp5)3 puncturing complex. Here, you can see the crystal structure of full-length VgrG1 from Pseudomonas aeruginosa at a resolution of 2.0 Å, which through a trimeric arrangement generates a needle-like shape composed of two main parts, the head and the spike, connected via a small neck region. The structure reveals several remarkable structural features pointing to the possible roles of the two main segments of VgrG1: the head as a scaffold cargo domain and the β-roll spike with implications in the cell-membrane puncturing process and as a carrier of cognate toxins (PDB code: 7Q5P)

#molecularart ... #immolecular ... #pseudomonas ... #needle ... #VgrG1 ... #secretion ... #system ... #xray

Protein rendered with @proteinimaging and represented with @corelphotopaint

Type VI secretion system
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Type VI secretion system

Published: