Structure of the two-component S-layer of the archaeon Sulfolobus acidocaldarius

Elife. 2024 Jan 22:13:e84617. doi: 10.7554/eLife.84617.

Abstract

Surface layers (S-layers) are resilient two-dimensional protein lattices that encapsulate many bacteria and most archaea. In archaea, S-layers usually form the only structural component of the cell wall and thus act as the final frontier between the cell and its environment. Therefore, S-layers are crucial for supporting microbial life. Notwithstanding their importance, little is known about archaeal S-layers at the atomic level. Here, we combined single-particle cryo electron microscopy, cryo electron tomography, and Alphafold2 predictions to generate an atomic model of the two-component S-layer of Sulfolobus acidocaldarius. The outer component of this S-layer (SlaA) is a flexible, highly glycosylated, and stable protein. Together with the inner and membrane-bound component (SlaB), they assemble into a porous and interwoven lattice. We hypothesise that jackknife-like conformational changes in SlaA play important roles in S-layer assembly.

Keywords: S-layer; Sulfolobus; archaea; cryoEM; molecular biophysics; single-particle analysis; structural biology; sub-tomogram averaging; sulfolobus acidocaldarius; tomography.

MeSH terms

  • Archaea
  • Bacteria
  • Cell Wall
  • Sulfolobus acidocaldarius* / metabolism