Mycobacterium tuberculosis SatS is a chaperone for the SecA2 protein export pathway
Brittany K. Miller, Ryan Hughes, Lauren S. Ligon, Nathan W. Rigel, Seidu Malik, Brandon R. Anjuwon-Foster, James C. Sacchettini, Miriam Braunstein
eLife · 2019-01
Abstract
The SecA2 protein export system is critical for the virulence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. However, the mechanism of this export pathway remains unclear. Through a screen for suppressors of a secA2 mutant, we identified a new player in the mycobacterial SecA2 pathway that we named SatS for SecA2 (two) Suppressor. In M. tuberculosis, SatS is required for the export of a subset of SecA2 substrates and for growth in macrophages. We further identify a role for SatS as a protein export chaperone. SatS exhibits multiple properties of a chaperone, including the ability to bind to and protect substrates from aggregation. Our structural studies of SatS reveal a distinct combination of a new fold and hydrophobic grooves resembling preprotein-binding sites of the SecB chaperone. These results are significant in better defining a molecular pathway for M. tuberculosis pathogenesis and in expanding our appreciation of the diversity among chaperones and protein export systems.
MeSH terms
- Chaperone (clinical)
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Virulence
- Cell biology
- Biology
- Mutant
- Suppressor
- Transport protein
- Virology
- Tuberculosis