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The Salmonella virulence protein SifA is a G protein antagonist.

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2008-09-13)
Laurie K Jackson, Parwez Nawabi, Cristiana Hentea, Everett A Roark, Kasturi Haldar
RESUMEN

Salmonella's success at proliferating intracellularly and causing disease depends on the translocation of a major virulence protein, SifA, into the host cell. SifA recruits membranes enriched in lysosome associated membrane protein 1 (LAMP1) and is needed for growth of Salmonella induced filaments (Sifs) and the Salmonella containing vacuole (SCV). It directly binds a host protein called SKIP (SifA and kinesin interacting protein) which is critical for membrane stability and motor dynamics at the SCV. SifA also contains a WxxxE motif, predictive of G protein mimicry in bacterial effectors, but whether and how it mimics the action of a host G protein is not known. We show that SKIP's pleckstrin homology domain, which directly binds SifA, also binds to the late endosomal GTPase Rab9. Knockdown studies suggest that both SKIP and Rab9 function to maintain peripheral LAMP1 distribution in cells. The Rab9:SKIP interaction is GTP-dependent and is inhibited by SifA binding to the SKIP pleckstrin homology domain, suggesting that SifA may be a Rab9 antagonist. SifA:SKIP binding is significantly tighter than Rab9:SKIP binding and may thus allow SifA to bring SKIP to the SCV via SKIP's Rab9-binding site. Rab9 can measurably reverse SifA-dependent LAMP1 recruitment and the perinuclear location of the SCV in cells. Importantly, binding to SKIP requires SifA residues W197 and E201 of the conserved WxxxE signature sequence, leading to the speculation that bacterial G protein mimicry may result in G protein antagonism.