The primary proteinous product of the
actA gene consists of 639 amino acids and includes the signal peptide (first N-terminal 29 amino acids) and the ActA chain (C-terminal 610 amino acids). Therefore, the sequence of the mature ActA protein consist of 610 amino acids. ActA has a molecular weight of 70,349 Da and is a surface protein. • N-terminal domain that is highly charged: amino acid residues 1-234 • central domain with proline-rich repeats: amino acid residues 235-394 • C-terminal domain with a transmembrane domain: amino acid residues 395-610
N-terminal domain The first 156 amino acids of the N-terminal domain consist of three regions (Fig. 2): • A-region with a stretch of acidic residues: 32-45 • AB-region, an actin monomer-binding region: 59-102 • C-region, a cofilin homology sequence: 145-156 The N-terminal portion of ActA plays an important role in actin polymerization. The domain displays consensus elements present in eukaryotic WASP family NPFs which include an actin monomer-binding region as well as an Arp2/3 binding C (central or cofilin homology) and A (acidic) region. The actin monomer-binding region of ActA has functional properties like the WASP-Homology-2 (WH2) or V domain, but differs in the sequence. Thus in WASP-family NPFs the order of the domains is WH2 followed by C, and then by A, which is not the case in ActA.
Central domain The central proline-rich region of ActA is crucial for ensuring efficient bacterial motility. There are four proline-rich repeats containing either FPPPP or FPPIP motifs. These regions mimic those of the host cell cytoskeletal protein
zyxin,
vinculin and
palladin, known to associate with
focal adhesions or stress fibers. The vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein (
VASP) can bind through its Ena/VASP homology 1 domain (
EVH1 domain) to the central proline-rich region and recruits
profilin, an actin monomer binding protein, which itself promotes polymerization at barbed ends of actin filaments. Furthermore, VASP seems to interact with
F-actin through its carboxy-terminal EVH2 domain, which provides a linkage of the bacterium to the tail. This statement is supported by the fact that ActA can bind multiple Ena/VASP proteins simultaneously and has a high affinity between ActA and Ena/VASP. VASP has been shown to reduce the frequency actin-Y-branches in vitro and thus increases the proportion of filaments which are organized in a parallel alignment in comet tails.
C-terminal domain The C-terminal domain of ActA has a hydrophobic region which anchors the protein in the bacterial membrane. In summary, besides • the absence of sequence homology in the actin-binding-region and • an alteration in the sequence of ARP2/3 activating domains typical for WASP-family NPFs (V(WH2)-C-A), • a major difference between ActA and host NPFs is that ActA does not have elements that bind to regulatory proteins such as Rho family GTPases. This structural difference between ActA and host NPFs can be advantageous for
L. monocytogenes and its pathogenesis because the actin nucleation activity of
L. monocytogenes is independent of host regulation. == Analogues ==