3OHN
Crystal structure of the FimD translocation domain
Summary for 3OHN
Entry DOI | 10.2210/pdb3ohn/pdb |
Related | 3RFZ |
Descriptor | Outer membrane usher protein FimD (1 entity in total) |
Functional Keywords | beta-barrel, protein translocation, outer membrane, membrane protein |
Biological source | Escherichia coli |
Cellular location | Cell outer membrane; Multi-pass membrane protein (By similarity): C8U0R5 |
Total number of polymer chains | 2 |
Total formula weight | 123074.63 |
Authors | |
Primary citation | Phan, G.,Remaut, H.,Wang, T.,Allen, W.J.,Pirker, K.F.,Lebedev, A.,Henderson, N.S.,Geibel, S.,Volkan, E.,Yan, J.,Kunze, M.B.,Pinkner, J.S.,Ford, B.,Kay, C.W.,Li, H.,Hultgren, S.J.,Thanassi, D.G.,Waksman, G. Crystal structure of the FimD usher bound to its cognate FimC-FimH substrate. Nature, 474:49-53, 2011 Cited by PubMed Abstract: Type 1 pili are the archetypal representative of a widespread class of adhesive multisubunit fibres in Gram-negative bacteria. During pilus assembly, subunits dock as chaperone-bound complexes to an usher, which catalyses their polymerization and mediates pilus translocation across the outer membrane. Here we report the crystal structure of the full-length FimD usher bound to the FimC-FimH chaperone-adhesin complex and that of the unbound form of the FimD translocation domain. The FimD-FimC-FimH structure shows FimH inserted inside the FimD 24-stranded β-barrel translocation channel. FimC-FimH is held in place through interactions with the two carboxy-terminal periplasmic domains of FimD, a binding mode confirmed in solution by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. To accommodate FimH, the usher plug domain is displaced from the barrel lumen to the periplasm, concomitant with a marked conformational change in the β-barrel. The amino-terminal domain of FimD is observed in an ideal position to catalyse incorporation of a newly recruited chaperone-subunit complex. The FimD-FimC-FimH structure provides unique insights into the pilus subunit incorporation cycle, and captures the first view of a protein transporter in the act of secreting its cognate substrate. PubMed: 21637253DOI: 10.1038/nature10109 PDB entries with the same primary citation |
Experimental method | X-RAY DIFFRACTION (3.011 Å) |
Structure validation
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