Lukas F. Milles, Klaus Schulten, Hermann E. Gaub, and Rafael C. Bernardi.
Molecular mechanism of extreme mechanostability in a pathogen
adhesin.
Science, 359:1527-1533, 2018.
(PMC: PMC6451932)
MILL2018
High resilience to mechanical stress is key when pathogens adhere to their target
and initiate infection. Using atomic force microscopy–based single-molecule force
spectroscopy, we explored the mechanical stability of the prototypical
staphylococcal adhesin SdrG, which targets a short peptide from human fibrinogen . Steered molecular dynamics simulations revealed, and single-molecule force
spectroscopy experiments confirmed, the mechanism by which this complex
withstands forces of over 2 nanonewtons, a regime previously associated with the
strength of a covalent bond. The target peptide, confined in a screwlike manner in
the binding pocket of SdrG, distributes forces mainly toward the peptide backbone
through an intricate hydrogen bond network. Thus, these adhesins can attach to
their target with exceptionally resilient mechanostability, virtually independent of
peptide side chains.
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