Free online reference management for clinicians and scientists

Sign up now

Recent "pilus" articles

  • These articles and links have been posted by Connotea users using the tag "pilus".
  • To add to this collection, or to start your own library:

Learn more

Watch a short video (2m 41s)

EXPORT LIST RSS ?
Bookmarks matching tag pilus
 
Number of articles per page:
10 | 25 | 50 | 100
 
Stabilizing Isopeptide Bonds Revealed in Gram-Positive Bacterial Pilus Structure
Hae Kang et al.
Science 318 (5856), 1625-8 (07 Dec 2007)
Many bacterial pathogens have long, slender pili through which they adhere to host cells. The crystal structure of the major pilin subunit from the Gram-positive human pathogen Streptococcus pyogenes at 2.2 angstroms resolution reveals an extended structure comprising two all-β domains. The molecules associate in columns through the crystal, with each carboxyl terminus adjacent to a conserved lysine of the next molecule. This lysine forms the isopeptide bonds that link the subunits in native pili, validating the relevance of the crystal assembly. Each subunit contains two lysine-asparagine isopeptide bonds generated by an intramolecular reaction, and we find evidence for similar isopeptide bonds in other cell surface proteins of Gram-positive bacteria. The present structure explains the strength and stability of such Gram-positive pili and could facilitate vaccine development.
 
BIOCHEMISTRY: How Some Pili Pull
Todd Yeates and Robert Clubb
Science 318 (5856), 1558-9 (07 Dec 2007)
Many bacteria persist in their environmental niches by attaching themselves via hairlike extensions that project from their surfaces. In Gram-negative bacteria, these filamentous, multisubunit protein structures--called pili or fimbria--can also be involved in the transfer of genetic material, induction of signaling in host cells, and twitching motility. Insights into pilus structure and biogenesis in Gram-positive bacteria have begun to emerge only recently (1-3). Pili in Gram-positive microbes can extend several micrometers from the cell surface but are especially thin, being only a few nanometers thick. On page 1625 of this issue, Kang et al. (4) show how these thin structures can withstand the mechanical rigors of life outside the cell.
 
Helicobacter exploits integrin for type IV secretion and kinase activation
Nature 449 (7164), 862 (2007)
 
Weapons of mass retraction.
Lori Burrows
Molecular microbiology 57 (4), 878-88 (Aug 2005)
Posted by GVdAuwera and 2 others with 1 comment to T4SS pilus HGT on Wed Mar 21 2007 at 12:34 UTC | info | related
 
Direct observation of extension and retraction of type IV pili
Jeffrey Skerker and Howard Berg
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 98 (12), 6901-4 (05 Jun 2001)
Posted by martainn to pilus motility on Mon Feb 26 2007 at 17:41 UTC | info | related
 
Structural Insights into the Secretin PulD and Its Trypsin-resistant Core
Journal of Biological Chemistry 280 (45), 37732 (2005)
Posted by martainn to typeII pilus EM on Thu Jan 25 2007 at 15:41 UTC | info | related
 
Direct repeat-mediated deletion of a type IV pilin gene results in major virulence attenuation of Francisella tularensis
Anna-Lena Forslund et al.
Molecular Microbiology 59 (6), 1818-30 (2006)
 
Molecular Cell -- Craig et al. - Type IV Pilus Structure by Cryo-Electron Microscopy and Crystallography: Implications for Pilus Assembly and Functions
www.molecule.org
Type IV pili (T4P) are long, thin, flexible filaments on bacteria that undergo assembly-disassembly from inner membrane pilin subunits and exhibit astonishing multifunctionality. Neisseria gonorrhoeae (gonococcal or GC) T4P are prototypic virulence factors and immune targets for increasingly antibiotic-resistant human pathogens, yet detailed structures are unavailable for any T4P. Here, we determined a detailed experimental GC-T4P structure by quantitative fitting of a 2.3 Å full-length pilin crystal structure into a 12.5 Å resolution native GC-T4P reconstruction solved by cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) and iterative helical real space reconstruction. Spiraling three-helix bundles form the filament core, anchor the globular heads, and provide strength and flexibility. Protruding hypervariable loops and posttranslational modifications in the globular head shield conserved functional residues in pronounced grooves, creating a surprisingly corrugated pilus surface. These results clarify T4P multifunctionality and assembly-disassembly while suggesting unified assembly mechanisms for T4P, archaeal flagella, and type II secretion system filaments.
 
Weapons of mass retraction
Lori L Burrows
Molecular microbiology 57 (4), 878-88 (Aug 2005)
Posted by martainn and 2 others with 1 comment to typeIV pilus structure on Thu Jul 06 2006 at 17:07 UTC | info | related
 
Crystallographic structure reveals phosphorylated pilin from Neisseria: phosphoserine sites modify type IV pilus surface chemistry and fibre morphology
Molecular Microbiology 31 (3), 743 (1999)
Posted by martainn to typeIV pilus structure on Thu Jul 06 2006 at 17:05 UTC | info | related

<< Prev 0      Showing entries 1 to 10 of 11 total      Next 1 >>