Skip to main navigation Skip to search Skip to main content

A comprehensive catalogue of receptor-binding domains in extracellular contractile injection systems

  • Nimrod Nachmias
  • , Zhiren Wang
  • , Xiao Feng
  • , Feng Jiang*
  • , Asaf Levy*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Hebrew University of Jerusalem
  • NHC Key Laboratory of Systems Biology of Pathogens
  • Key Laboratory of Pathogen Infection Prevention and Control (MOE)
  • State Key Laboratory of Respiratory Health and Multimorbidity
  • Institute of Pathogen Biology, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Extracellular contractile injection systems (eCISs) are bacteriophage tail-derived toxin delivery complexes in prokaryotes. They play roles in microbial interactions with hosts, using tail fiber proteins for target cell binding. Here, we present a comprehensive analysis of eCIS tail fiber genes in bacterial and archaeal genomes, providing insights into their remarkable diversity, target cells, functional adaptations, and evolutionary dynamics. We identified 3445 eCIS tail fiber proteins encoded in 2585 eCIS loci from 1069 microbes. These fibers can be categorized by five new N-terminal domains responsible for tail fiber attachment to eCIS baseplates. We use structure prediction to classify fibers into 276 structural clusters and 1177 domain fold families, which likely mediate glycan and protein binding on the cell surface of eukaryotes or bacterial targets. DNA sequences encoding these rapidly evolving domains may have been acquired from diverse eukaryotes, bacteria, and viruses. Finally, we experimentally show that a candidate tail fiber from a Paenibacillus eCIS can bind and direct effector injection into THP-1 human monocyte-like cells, possibly binding D-mannose on the cell surface. This study reveals the exceptional diversity of eCIS receptor binding domains, suggests new eCIS target cells, and provides thousands of proteins that can adhere to different cell types.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1939
JournalNature Communications
Volume17
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2026
Externally publishedYes

Funding

FundersFunder number
Core Facilities and Service Centers
ICAR-National Institute for Plant Biotechnology
ZYGXQNJSKYCXNLZCXM-H3
Ministry of Innovation, Science and Technology005652
Volkswagen FoundationZN4041
National Key Research and Development Program of China2023YFE0113400
Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences Initiative for Innovative Medicine2023-I2M-2-001, 2024-I2M-TS-020
Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences2023-PT310-04
Israel Science Foundation3062/20, 249/25, 1535/20

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'A comprehensive catalogue of receptor-binding domains in extracellular contractile injection systems'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this