Abstract
The intracellular bacterial pathogen Legionella pneumophila utilizes the Dot/Icm type IV secretion system to translocate approximately 300 effector proteins to establish a replicative niche known as the Legionella‐containing vacuole. The Dot/Icm system is classified as a type IVB secretion system, which is evolutionarily closely related to the I‐type conjugation systems and is distinct from type IVA secretion systems, such as the Agrobacterium VirB/D4 system. Although both type IVA and IVB systems directly transport nucleic acids or proteins into the cytosol of recipient cells, the components and architecture of type IVB systems are much more complex than those of type IVA systems. Taking full advantage of rapidly developing cryo‐electron microscopy techniques, the structural details of the transport apparatus and coupling complexes in the Dot/Icm system have been clarified in the past few years. In this review, we summarize recent progress in the structural studies of the L. pneumophila type IVB secretion system and the insights gained into the mechanisms of substrate recognition and transport.
Keywords: crystal structure, electron cryotomography, Legionella pneumophila, type IV secretion system
Abbreviations
- Cryo‐EM
cryo‐electron microscopy
- Dot/Icm
defect in organelle trafficking/Intracellular multiplication
- ECT
electron cryotomography
- ER
endoplasmic reticulum
- LCV
Legionella‐containing vacuole
- OMC
outer membrane cap
- OMER
outer membrane‐embedded ring
- PR
periplasmic ring
- sfGFP
superfolder green fluorescent protein
- T4CP
type IV coupling protein
- T4SS
type IV secretion system
- T4SSDot/Icm
Dot/Icm type IV secretion system
- T4ASS
type IVA secretion system
- T4BSS
type IVB secretion system
- T6SS
type VI secretion system
INTRODUCTION
Legionella pneumophila is an intracellular Gram‐negative bacterium that causes acute pneumonia known as legionellosis. 1 This bacterium was first identified in an outbreak among people who participated in the American Legion convention held in Philadelphia, USA in 1976. A year later, L. pneumophila was clinically isolated as the causative pathogen. 2 It took two more years until a method was established to stably cultivate L. pneumophila using a medium in the laboratory. 3 L. pneumophila is primarily an environmental bacterium that resides in protozoan hosts, such as Acanthamoeba. Humans have invented aerosol‐producing devices, such as humidifiers, showers, and recirculating baths, facilitating human infection, which occurs by aerosol inhalation. To date, more than 60 different Legionella species have been identified. 4 L. pneumophila serogroup 1 is the most prevalent pathogen among patients with severe symptoms. 1 Human‐to‐human transmission of Legionella can occur, even though it is very rare, 5 , 6 and legionellosis morbidity is increasing annually worldwide. 7
Once L. pneumophila is internalized by macrophages, the bacterial phagosome is converted into an endoplasmic reticulum (ER)‐like compartment called the Legionella‐containing vacuole (LCV), which serves as a replicative niche. For LCV biogenesis, L. pneumophila intercepts the early secretory pathway between the ER and the Golgi apparatus. 8 , 9 , 10 , 11 , 12 In this process, L. pneumophila uses effector proteins. 13 A recent large‐scale genomic analysis has revealed that the genus Legionella has acquired a wide variety of proteins from all domains of biology to hijack and manipulate host cellular systems during infection. 14
To translocate numerous effector proteins into host cells, L. pneumophila utilizes the Dot/Icm type IV secretion system (T4SSDot/Icm). 15 , 16 , 17 , 18 , 19 The genes required for the survival of L. pneumophila in the host cell were originally identified in the late 1990s by two independent research groups led by Howard Shuman 20 and Ralph Isberg. 21 These genes are named intracellular multiplication (icm) or defect in organelle trafficking (dot), respectively, 22 , 23 , 24 , 25 , 26 including those encoding the proteins composing T4SSDot/Icm. Therefore, some T4SSDot/Icm components were assigned two distinct names. The dot/icm genes are arranged at two loci on the chromosome. The loci are highly conserved among L. pneumophila genomes, 27 whereas the genes encoding effector proteins are distributed throughout the genome. 23 , 28
T4SSDot/Icm is classified as a type IVB secretion system (T4BSS). The T4BSS is evolutionarily closely related to I‐type conjugation systems such as the self‐transmissible IncI plasmids, 27 , 29 , 30 , 31 and it is distinct from the type IVA secretion system (T4ASS), which is related to the VirB/D4 system of the plant pathogen Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Interestingly, although the T4ASSs and the T4BSSs function similarly by transporting either nucleic acids or proteins directly into the cytosol of recipient cells, the components and architecture of the T4BSSs are much more complex than those of the T4ASSs. There are more than 20 T4BSS components, whereas the T4ASS includes approximately 12 components. The structure and assembly process of T4ASSs have been analyzed at the atomic level; 17 , 18 however, the exact mechanisms of transport have not been fully elucidated. In contrast, the structure of the T4BSSs remains to be fully elucidated due to its complexity. In the past few years, however, remarkable progress has been made in this field, facilitated by an improvement in cryo‐electron microscopy (cryo‐EM). This review focuses on recent findings in the structural biology of the L. pneumophila T4SSDot/Icm.
T4SSDOT/ICM TRANSPORT APPARATUS
Core complex
A T4ASS sub‐complex called the “core complex” was first visualized via cryo‐EM images of a complex derived from the IncN plasmid pKM101 conjugation system by Waksman's group in 2009. 32 The T4ASS core complex consists of three proteins, the inner‐membrane protein VirB10 and the outer‐membrane proteins VirB7 and VirB9, and was initially thought to span both the inner and outer membranes. Regarding the T4SSDot/Icm, Vogel et al. found five L. pneumophila proteins, DotC, DotD, DotH, DotG, and DotF, as putative components of the core complex in 2006. 33 Kubori et al. first visualized the structure of the T4SSDot/Icm core complex biochemically isolated from L. pneumophila in 2014 34 by using a method similar to the one used to visualize the needle complex of the Salmonella type III secretion system. 35 The native T4SSDot/Icm core complex is ring‐shaped with a central pore, and contains all five putative component proteins. Unexpectedly, it was found that DotG is dispensable for complex assembly; a ring‐shaped complex with a larger pore was formed in the absence of DotG. At the sequence level, the C‐terminal domain of DotG is highly homologous to that of T4ASS VirB10, a central channel component of the T4ASS core complex.
In situ structure of the T4SSDot/Icm transport apparatus
In 2017, the structure of the T4SSDot/Icm complex embedded in bacterial membranes was visualized by Ghosal et al. 36 using electron cryotomography (ECT). This was the first in situ structure reported for all T4SS complexes. The structure has the characteristic shape of a “Wi‐Fi symbol,” consisting of two distinct curved layers, a larger layer just below the outer membrane and a smaller layer in the middle of the periplasm (Figure 1).
Figure 1.

Dot/Icm type IV secretion system (T4SSDot/Icm) transport apparatus. (a) Schematic of the major densities in the core complex structure adapted from Ghosal et al. 36 (b) Asymmetric reconstruction of the T4SS Dot/Icm. The outer membrane cap (OMC), the periplasmic ring (PR), and the dome are shown in blue, green, and grey, respectively. Additional densities with no apparent symmetry sandwiched between the OMC and PR are shown in red. Figure 1 was adopted and modified from Sheedlo et al. 48 (c) Schematic of the densities in the cytoplasmic ATPase complex. The tomographic image data were adopted from the figure by Park et al. 58
The same researchers further performed molecular dissection of the T4SSDot/Icm complex. 37 They assigned T4SSDot/Icm component proteins to the electron densities of the images using a series of L. pneumophila mutants lacking T4SSDot/Icm components or strains expressing component proteins fused to the superfolder green fluorescent protein (sfGFP). The resulting model of the T4SSDot/Icm complex is shown in Figure 1a. The authors proposed that (i) DotC, DotD, and DotH form the beta and gamma densities and the elbow, (ii) DotG forms the hat and the channel, and (iii) DotF forms the wing. In addition to these proteins, DotK, IcmX, DotA, and IcmF were placed in the model. DotK (also known as LphA, see below), an outer‐membrane lipoprotein reported previously to be co‐purified with the core complex, 34 forms the alpha density. The soluble periplasmic protein IcmX 38 forms a part of the plug, whose density decreased significantly in the ΔicmX mutant. The periplasmic domain of IcmF, a homolog of the type VI secretion system (T6SS) core component TssL, 39 forms a central part of the plug density. Interestingly, the periplasmic domain of the inner membrane protein DotA, 39 , 40 which is secreted via the T4SSDot/Icm to extracellular milieu, 40 was positioned at the upper part of the stalk channel as a ring structure. DotK disruption did not affect the growth of HL‐60 cells, 26 while a strain lacking IcmF showed partial growth defects in U937 and HL‐60 cells. 41 , 42 This suggests that DotK and IcmF are required for maximal intracellular growth but are not essential for effector translocation per se, which substantiates the unusual plasticity of the functional T4SSDot/Icm transport apparatus composition. The in situ T4SSDot/Icm structure revealed a complex with 13‐fold symmetries, 37 while all known T4ASS complexes exhibit 14‐fold symmetries. 43 , 44 , 45 , 46
Atomic resolution structure of the T4SSDot/Icm transport apparatus
Durie et al. 47 reported the high‐resolution structure of the T4SSDot/Icm outer membrane complex using single‐particle cryo‐EM. They purified the native core complex using essentially the same procedure as that used by Kubori et al. 35 and reconstituted the atomic model of the complex. Combined with their follow‐up study utilizing the new “3D variability analysis” technology, 48 they built the model structure of the T4SSDot/Icm transport apparatus consisting of three distinctive structural modules: the dome, the outer membrane cap (OMC), and the periplasmic ring (PR), which showed 16‐fold, 13‐fold, and 18‐fold symmetries, respectively, illuminating the unexpected symmetry mismatch in the complex (Figure 1b). The flexible and dynamic arrangement of the molecules at the interface between the structural modules is thought to be the key feature of the T4SSDot/Icm. The symmetry of the OMC matches that observed in the in situ structure reported by Ghosal et al. 37 The core complex isolated from the ΔdotG mutant lacks the dome and the PR, 47 which is consistent with the previous observation 34 and suggests that these modules contain DotG. In the refined model, this research group assigned the C‐terminal domain of DotG to the dome. 48 The model of DotG positioning from the PR to the dome is consistent with the fact that DotG shares sequence homology with T4ASS VirB10, the central channel component of the T4ASS core complex, 31 , 44 even revealing the unexpected copy number in the dome. Importantly, DotH was identified as the key protein that accommodates the symmetry mismatch by connecting the PR and OMC, revealing the distinctive apparent copy numbers between the modules. 48 As for the OMC disk density, the core components DotC, DotD, and DotH can be fitted together with DotK and Dis1 (Lpg0657), which had been a hypothetical interactor with the Dot/Icm T4BSS. 49 The stoichiometry of each component (DotD:DotC:DotH:DotK:Dis1) was estimated to be 2:1:1:1:1. 47 Both DotK and Dis1 have an OmpA‐like domain, which is known as a peptidoglycan‐binding domain. 49 Dis1 was shown to be required for maximum intracellular growth in Acanthamoeba castellanii and mouse macrophages. 49 These observations, together with the model obtained from the in situ ECT, 37 suggest that DotK and Dis1 are auxiliary components of the T4SSDot/Icm transport apparatus. They assigned two additional proteins outside the dot/icm locus, Dis2 (Lpg0823) and Dis3 (Lpg2847), which are associated with the OMC. They proposed a final stoichiometry of 31:26:18:18:13:13:13:13:13 (DotF: DotD: DotG: DotH: DotC: DotK:Dis1: Dis2: Dis3) for the T4SSDot/Icm transport apparatus. 48
Cytoplasmic ATPases: DotO–DotB complex
DotO and DotB are ATPases of the T4SSDot/Icm essential for the T4SS function. 50 , 51 , 52 , 53 DotO and DotB correspond to VirB4 and VirB11 in the T4ASS, respectively. 31 , 54 , 55 Biochemical analyses showed that DotO was membrane‐associated, while DotB was partially detected in the cytosolic fraction. 33 , 52 However, how these two ATPases contribute to the function of the T4SS remains to be clarified.
In 2018, Chetrit et al. 56 examined the molecular assembly of the L. pneumophila T4SSDot/Icm complex including the two distinctive ATPases. 57 Time‐lapse images using fluorescent microscopy revealed that wild‐type DotB moved back and forth between the two poles of a bacterial cell, while DotBE191K, which can bind ATP but is unable to hydrolyze it, was stably recruited to the cell pole. Using ECT analysis of the L. pneumophila strain expressing DotBE191K, they were able to capture the in situ structure of the entire complex, including DotO and DotB. The reconstruction revealed that a DotB hexamer was directly associated with DotO, which formed a cylindrical structure connected to the T4SSDot/Icm core complex. DotO also formed a hexamer composed of six dimers positioned at the base of the inner‐membrane spanning channel. This molecular positioning is distinctive from the R388 T4ASS complex, which has two VirB4 hexamer “legs”. 46 In 2020, Park et al. 58 demonstrated that docking the DotB hexamer to the DotO hexamer promotes conformational changes in the entire complex to open the channel in the inner membrane, supporting the hypothesis that DotB binding is essential for an early stage of substrate translocation by the T4SSDot/Icm machinery. 56 Interestingly, the non‐hydrolyzable DotB mutant protein does not localize at bacterial cell poles in the mutant strains lacking inner membrane proteins, such as DotJ, IcmT, IcmV, IcmQ, DotI, DotU, DotE, and DotA. 56 In addition, DotO localization at the cell poles was abrogated in the absence of DotI and DotU. Considering that DotU is required for the polar localization of the T4SSDot/Icm complex (see Section Assembly pathway of the T4SSDot/Icm transport apparatus) and that DotI is the counterpart of T4ASS VirB8, 59 which is a part of a subcomplex connecting the T4ASS core complex and the cytoplasmic VirB4 legs, it is plausible that the DotO‐DotB cytoplasmic complex is connected to the T4SSDot/Icm complex via inner membrane components such as DotI and DotJ, a partial homolog of DotI.
Assembly pathway of the T4SSDot/Icm transport apparatus
In the process of analyzing the in situ structure of the T4SSDot/Icm complex, Ghosal et al. 37 reported that the densities corresponding to DotH, DotG, and DotF were drastically reduced in a ΔdotUΔicmF double mutant strain. This observation was consistent with previous results indicating that DotU and IcmF, which are homologs of T6SS TssL and TssM, respectively, 60 , 61 , 62 play important roles in intracellular replication, 41 effector translocation, 63 and stabilization of the T4SSDot/Icm complex. 41 , 42 , 63 In addition, Ghosal et al. 37 observed a lower number of T4SSDot/Icm complexes at cell poles in the ΔdotUΔicmF mutant than in the wild‐type strain, and found that the T4SSDot/Icm core components (DotC, DotD, DotF, DotG, and DotH) were unable to localize to the cell poles in the absence of DotU and IcmF. In contrast, DotU and IcmF could localize to cell poles in the absence of any other T4SSDot/Icm components. Based on these results, they proposed that DotU and icmF are integral membrane proteins that can recruit other components to the bacterial cell poles.
In 2020, Park et al. reported structural heterogeneity of the T4SSDot/Icm complexes in each individual bacterial cell using ECT. 58 Subtomogram averaging and classification of the T4SSDot/Icm complexes revealed that there were two distinct class averages: one had structures associated with the outer membrane but lacked cytoplasmic densities, and the other had intact structures containing components localized in the inner and outer membranes and cytoplasm. To further define potential subassemblies, they analyzed dotB E191K, ΔdotB, and ΔdotL mutants and found five distinct subassembled intermediates. The smallest and least complex is called the outer membrane‐embedded ring (OMER). Based on the identification of the distinctive subassembly intermediates, they proposed a pathway for hierarchal assembly initiated by the OMER. In summary, thus far, the precise T4SSDot/Icm assembly pathway remains unclear, and detailed structural analyses using T4SSDot/Icm component mutants are required for further elucidation.
T4SSDot/Icm COUPLING COMPLEX AND SUBSTRATE RECOGNITION
Type IV coupling proteins (T4CPs) are AAA‐type hexameric ATPases associated with the bacterial inner membrane via N‐terminal transmembrane segments. 64 T4CPs are conserved in most, but not all, T4SSs. 30 T4CPs are named after their functions of “coupling” translocating substrates and the transmembrane transport apparatus. 30 , 65 , 66 , 67 , 68 DotL is a T4CP of the T4SSDot/Icm; thus, it is thought to play a central role in substrate recognition and recruitment to the transport apparatus. 69 , 70 Several studies have reported that most T4SSDot/Icm substrate proteins harbor translocation signal sequences, which are rich in short polar, hydrophobic, or negatively charged amino acids at their C‐terminus. 28 , 71 , 72 However, early studies also demonstrated that mutant strains lacking icmW or icmS showed moderately defective phenotypes of intracellular growth and host cell cytotoxicity, suggesting that IcmS and IcmW are not essential for effector translocation per se, but are required for efficient translocation of an “IcmSW‐dependent” subset of effector proteins. 73 , 74 , 75 , 76 , 77 , 78 IcmS and IcmW, small acidic proteins that can form a heterodimer called IcmSW, have been proposed to serve as adaptors to recruit IcmSW‐dependent substrate proteins to the transport apparatus. In 2012, Vincent et al. 70 reported lines of evidence suggesting a T4SSDot/Icm subcomplex composed of the T4CP DotL, the apparatus proteins DotM and DotN, and the secretion adaptor proteins IcmS and IcmW. Furthermore, Sutherland et al. 73 demonstrated that the DotL C‐terminal extension region, which is prevalent among T4BSS, but not T4ASS coupling proteins, was able to bind directly to IcmSW. The DotL(671‐753) segment was required for binding. 73 Here, we describe the recent discoveries regarding the substrate recognition by the T4CP complex.
DotLN‐IcmSW‐LvgA complex
In 2017, Kwak et al. 79 reported the crystal structures of DotL(656‐783)‐IcmSW, DotL(590‐659)‐DotN, and DotL(656‐783)‐IcmSW‐LvgA. Based on the individual structures, they reconstituted DotL(590‐783)‐DotN‐IcmSW‐LvgA (Figure 2). In the complex, the C‐terminal segments of DotL bound to DotN or IcmSW adopted an unfolded conformation. Thus, the structure of DotL segments is likely unstable in the absence of interacting partners, which is consistent with the chemical instability of DotL in the absence of DotN or IcmSW, as reported by Vincent et al. 70 Taking advantage of the well‐established properties of structure‐solved T4CPs, such as R388 TrwB, which forms a ring‐shaped hexamer, 80 Kwak et al. 79 constructed the model for the “T4CP holocomplex” consisting of a DotLN‐IcmSW‐LvgA hexamer. The T4CP holocomplex resembled an elongated bell‐shaped architecture, consisting of the membrane‐proximal ATPase hexamer and the membrane‐distal assemblies containing the DotL C‐terminal segment. One important caveat was that this “holocomplex” did not contain DotM (see Section DotM and Glu‐rich/E‐block‐containing effectors).
Figure 2.

Proposed models of substrate recognition and transport by the T4SSDot/Icm. Possible schematic models of substrate recognition and transport based on the reported structures. 79 , 82 , 83 , 84 , 85 There are two possible routes of effector transport. The T4CP complex recruits effector proteins via IcmSW, LvgA, or DotM, and then transfers them to the central channel formed by DotB and DotO (Route 1). Alternatively, effector proteins recruited to the T4CP complex are transported into the periplasmic space via the T4CP channel, and then exported via the core complex by an unknown mechanism (Route 2)
LvgA was discovered as a virulence factor of L. pneumophila using signature‐tagged mutagenesis and a guinea‐pig infection model; however, its molecular role remains unknown. 81 Kwak et al. 79 found that IcmSW‐dependent effector proteins VpdB, SetA, and PieA are able to interact with DotLN‐IcmSW‐LvgA, but not with DotLN‐IcmSW, suggesting that LvgA may induce a conformational change in IcmSW for substrate recognition, or that effectors may interact with LvgA, but not with IcmSW. Kim et al. 82 further expanded the structural analysis of the interaction between the T4CP complex and the effector proteins. First, they found that the C‐terminal region of VpdB is required for binding to DotL(656‐783)‐IcmSW‐LvgA and then solved the crystal structure of DotL(656‐783)‐IcmSW‐LvgA‐VpdB(461‐590). The results demonstrated that VpdB directly interacts with LvgA, but not with IcmSW, indicating that IcmSW serves as an adaptor connecting the T4CP and LvgA‐substrate complexes. Consistently, the translocation of all these effector proteins is partially abrogated by the loss of LvgA; however, the extent of the defects does not exceed the loss of IcmSW. Phe476 of VpdB is important for the interaction with the hydrophobic pocket composed of four residues (Phe149, Ile153, Pro166, Tyr173) of LvgA. They found the LvgA binding motif (FxxxLxxxK) in many IcmSW‐dependent effectors including VpdB and SidH, but not in PieA and SetA. Of note, VpdB also has a Glu‐rich/E‐block signal sequence 28 near the C‐terminus, which may interact with DotM (see Section DotM and Glu‐rich/E‐block‐containing effectors).
Xu et al. 83 also reported the crystal structure of DotL(661‐773)‐IcmSW and provided evidence for the existence of the DotLN‐IcmSW‐LvgA complex in 2017. They also explored the detailed mechanism of substrate recognition by IcmSW, but not in the complex with DotL. They determined the binding surface of IcmSW to an IcmSW‐dependent effector SidF using photocrosslinking assays and found that the effector‐binding surface of IcmSW overlaps with the DotL‐binding surface.
DotM and Glu‐rich/E‐block‐containing effectors
DotM is supposed to be a T4CP complex component, but it was not included in the structural model described above. 79 , 82 Similar to the T4CP DotL, DotM has membrane‐spanning segments at its N‐terminus. 70 The crystal structures of the cytoplasmic domains of DotM have been independently reported by two groups. 79 , 84 Meir et al. 84 found a positively charged DotM surface composed of arginine and lysine residues, which is responsible for binding to the negatively charged Glu‐rich/E‐block motif located at the C‐terminus of a subset of effector proteins. 28 The L. pneumophila mutant strains carrying the amino acid substitutions in DotM (R196E/R197E or R217E), which alter the charge of the substrate‐recognition surface of DotM, showed intracellular growth defects in mouse J774A.1 cells and A. castellanii. The mutant strains also showed subtle but significant defects in translocation of effectors carrying the Glu‐rich/E‐block motif, but not of those lacking the motif. 84 Thus, DotM plays a role in substrate recognition of Glu‐rich/E‐block‐containing effector proteins.
DotLMNYZ hetero‐pentameric complex
Meir et al. 85 conducted a cryo‐EM single particle analysis of the DotL‐containing complex purified from L. pneumophila membrane fractions solubilized with detergent. The purified complex contained all known T4CP complex components: DotL, DotM, DotN, IcmS, IcmW, and LvgA, and two additional uncharacterized proteins, DotY (Lpg0294) and DotZ (Lpg1549). The assessed mass of the complex was ~300 kDa, which is consistent with a complex that may contain one copy each of the eight proteins. The loss of DotY, DotZ, or both resulted in a one‐fold reduction in the translocation of both IcmSW‐dependent and IcmSW‐independent effector proteins, suggesting that these uncharacterized proteins play a role in T4SS transport. The cytoplasmic domains of DotL and DotM, DotN, DotZ, and the first 77 N‐terminal residues of DotY (DotLMNYZ hetero‐pentameric complex) were assigned to the structure of the purified complex. However, IcmSW and LvgA were not assigned to the model structure. The flexibility of the DotL region connecting the DotLMNYZ hetero‐pentameric complex and the DotL‐IcmSW‐LvgA complex explains why IcmSW‐LvgA is invisible in the structure. They also constructed a hexamer model of the DotLMNYZ hetero‐pentameric complex, similar to the DotLN‐IcmSW‐LvgA complex of Kwak et al. 79 Intriguingly, the acidic surface of DotM faces outside the hexameric model of hetero‐pentameric complex. Therefore, if DotM‐dependent effectors are transported through the channel formed by the DotL hexamer, their Glu‐rich/E‐block segment must pass through the cavity formed by DotM, DotN, and DotZ to interact with DotM.
Integrating the findings described in this section, we propose possible models of substrate recognition and recruitment, as shown in Figure 2, where the substrate proteins are recruited to the T4CP holocomplex in the bacterial cytoplasm through interaction with IcmSW, LvgA, and/or DotM. These three pathways may not be mutually exclusive. Thereafter, substrate proteins associated with the T4CP complex may be transferred to the T4SSDot/Icm transport apparatus without going through the DotL channel (Route 1). Alternatively, the substrates might be placed under the channel formed by the DotL hexamer. Then, the substrates, being unfolded somehow, may traverse the central channel (Route 2). However, if this is the case, the exact connection of the DotL channel to the central conduit of the T4SSDot/Icm transport apparatus has not been addressed yet.
CONCLUSION AND PERSPECTIVES
In this review, we describe the recent discoveries regarding the structural biology of the T4SSDot/Icm transport apparatus and the coupling complexes. Needless to say, the huge technical advances in structural biology, such as cryo‐EM, have promoted these seminal studies. Furthermore, the determination of atomic‐level structure explaining the LvgA‐ and DotM‐dependent substrate recognitions expanded our knowledge of how the T4SSDot/Icm recognizes numerous effector proteins with distinct types of signal sequences. However, these findings have raised new questions. To date, the in situ structure of the T4SSDot/Icm coupling complex has not been elucidated. How the coupling complex and the transport apparatus interact each other and how the substrate proteins are actually transported using this machinery remains unclear. We also do not know whether the known structures of the T4SSDot/Icm machinery reflect the active form of transport during infection. Understanding the structure and mechanism of the T4SSDot/Icm during L. pneumophila infection will be a major challenge for future research.
DISCLOSURE
The authors declare that there are no conflicts of interest.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We would like to thank all the laboratory members who participated in the discussion. This work was supported by a research grant from the Tatematsu Foundation to Tomoe K.
Kitao T, Kubori T, Nagai H. Recent advances in structural studies of the Legionella pneumophila Dot/Icm type IV secretion system. Microbiol and Immunol. 2022;66:67–74. 10.1111/1348-0421.12951
Contributor Information
Tomoe Kitao, Email: kitao@gifu-u.ac.jp.
Hiroki Nagai, Email: hnagai@gifu-u.ac.jp.
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