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    Home»Biology»Umbrella Toxins: A Groundbreaking Class of Antimicrobials Found in Soil Bacteria
    Biology

    Umbrella Toxins: A Groundbreaking Class of Antimicrobials Found in Soil Bacteria

    By University of Washington School of Medicine/UW MedicineApril 19, 20241 Comment5 Mins Read
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    Umbrella Toxin Proteins From Streptomyces Bacteria
    Umbrella-shaped antibacterial toxin particles drifting toward and engaging a bacterial target cell. The toxins are derived from Streptomyces and potently inhibit the growth of competing species in the same genus. Credit: Angela Gao

    Umbrella-shaped proteins discovered by scientists target and kill specific bacteria, holding promise for treating resistant infections.

    Researchers have discovered toxic protein particles, shaped like umbrellas, that soil bacteria known as Streptomyces secrete to squelch competitors, especially others of their own species.

    The discovery of the umbrella toxin particles and related information about their structures, composition, and mode of action were published on April 17 in the journal Nature.

    The umbrella toxin proteins are the latest example of these bacteria’s varied strikes on their microscopic rivals. The crowded, diverse bacteria communities in which they live are a melee of antimicrobial attacks, counterattacks, and defenses.

    Antibiotics and Bacterial Warfare

    Ironically, many clinically used antibiotics derive directly from, or are inspired by, molecules that bacteria use against each other in their natural habitat. Streptomyces’ chemical weaponry against their competitors is one of the richest sources of such molecules. Among them is the common, broad-spectrum drug streptomycin.

    What makes these newly detected antibacterial toxins different is that, unlike the Streptomyces’ small-molecule antibiotics, umbrella toxins are large complexes composed of multiple proteins. They are also far more specific in the bacteria they target, compared with small-molecule antibiotics.

    The authors of the Nature paper speculate that these properties of umbrella toxins explain why they escaped discovery for more than 100 years of research on toxins produced by Streptomyces.

    Bioinformatics and Cryo-Electron Microscopy Reveal New Insights

    Genes encoding umbrella toxins were originally uncovered through a bioinformatics search for new bacterial toxins. In biochemical and genetic experiments led by Qinqin Zhao in Joseph Mougous’ microbiology lab at the University of Washington School of Medicine, the scientists learned that these toxins associate with other proteins in a large complex.

    Cryo-electron microscopy of these protein complexes was performed by Young Park in the laboratory of David Veesler, professor of biochemistry at the UW School of Medicine and an Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

    These studies revealed that the toxin complexes Qinqin isolated adopt a striking appearance befitting their discovery in Seattle. They look like umbrellas.

    Unique Structure and Specificity

    “The shape of these particles is quite peculiar, and it will be interesting in future work to learn how their unusual morphology helps them eliminate target bacteria,” noted Mougous, a professor of microbiology at the UW School of Medicine and a Howard Hughes Medical Investigator.

    The scientists then sought to determine the targets of these toxins by screening their effects on every organism they could conceivably target, from fungi to 140 different bacteria, including some taken from sorghum plants in the lab of study author Devin Coleman at the University of California-Berkeley and the U.S. Department of Agriculture Agricultural Research Service. .

    Among these potential adversaries, the toxins specifically targeted their own brethren: other Streptomyces species.

    “We think this exquisite specificity may be due to the proteins that make up the spokes of the umbrella, which vary across the particles. These include proteins that might latch onto specific sugars found on the surface of competitor bacteria,” commented study author S. Brook Peterson, a senior scientist in the Mougous lab.

    By analyzing the thousands of publicly available bacterial genomes, study authors Dapeng Zhang of St. Louis University and his graduate student Youngjun Tan found that many other species of bacteria also have the genes to manufacture umbrella particle toxins. Interestingly, these species all form branching filaments, an unusual mode of growth among bacteria.

    Potential Clinical Applications and Broader Implications

    In addition to the many questions remaining to be answered about the basic biology of umbrella toxin particles, Mougous, and his colleagues are intrigued by their potential clinical applications.

    They suspect that the bacteria that cause tuberculosis and diphtheria may be sensitive to umbrella toxins. They note these same bacteria have become resistant to traditional antibiotics. Umbrella toxin particles might be worth exploring, the scientists suggested, for their potential to subdue these serious disease-causing bacteria.

    Reference: “Streptomyces umbrella toxin particles block hyphal growth of competing species” by Qinqin Zhao, Savannah Bertolli, Young-Jun Park, Yongjun Tan, Kevin J. Cutler, Pooja Srinivas, Kyle L. Asfahl, Citlali Fonesca-García, Larry A. Gallagher, Yaqiao Li, Yaxi Wang, Devin Coleman-Derr, Frank DiMaio, Dapeng Zhang, S. Brook Peterson, David Veesler and Joseph D. Mougous, 17 April 2024, Nature.
    DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-07298-z

    The study was supported by the Microbial Interactions & Microbiome Center at the University of Washington, which Mougous directs as the holder of the Lynn M. and Michael D. Garvey Endowed Chair in Gastroenterology. The goal of mim_c is to catalyze microbiome research in the Pacific Northwest, with an emphasis on defining the molecular mechanisms of interbacterial interactions underlying microbial communities important to human health or the environment.

    The study of umbrella toxin particles was also funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Biological Technology Program: Harnessing Enzymatic Activity for Lifesaving Remedies (9HR0011-21-0012), the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (75N93022C00036), a Pew Medical Scholars Program, an Investigators in the Pathogenesis of Infectious Disease Award from the Burroughs Wellcome Fund, the UW Arnold and Mabel Beckman cryo-EM Center, the National Institutes of Health S100DO32290, Saint Louis University Startup Fund, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (CRIS 2030-21430-0080OD), and the USDA-NIFA (2019-67019-29306). The study is a contribution of the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Secure Biosystems Design Focus Area: Persistence Control Engineered Functions in Complex Soil Microbiomes (U.S. Department of Energy contract DE-AC05-76RL01830).

    Antibiotics Bacteria Bioinformatics University of Washington
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    1 Comment

    1. Rachel agent on April 22, 2024 12:49 am

      Yes infect the bacteria with a protein (hence,giving it a prion desease that will eventually kill it) and let’s just hope that it cannot in return possibly infect us while it is infected. I wouldn’t mess with proteins for sure.

      Reply
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