TIR domains produce histidine-ADPR as an immune signal in bacteria.

Publication Type:

Journal Article

Source:

Nature, Volume 642, Issue 8067, p.467-473 (2025)

Keywords:

Bacterial Proteins, Bacteriophages, Crystallography, X-Ray, Histidine, Ligands, Models, Molecular, Protein Domains, Signal Transduction, Viral Proteins

Abstract:

<p>Toll/interleukin-1 receptor (TIR) domains are central components of pattern recognition immune proteins across all domains of life. In bacteria and plants, TIR-domain proteins recognize pathogen invasion and then produce immune signalling molecules exclusively comprising nucleotide moieties. Here we show that the TIR-domain protein of the type II Thoeris defence system in bacteria produces a unique signalling molecule comprising the amino acid histidine conjugated to ADP-ribose (His-ADPR). His-ADPR is generated in response to phage infection and activates the cognate Thoeris effector by binding a Macro domain located at the C terminus of the effector protein. By determining the crystal structure of a ligand-bound Macro domain, we describe the structural basis for His-ADPR and its recognition and show its role by biochemical and mutational analyses. Our analyses furthermore reveal a family of phage proteins that bind and sequester His-ADPR signalling molecules, enabling phages to evade TIR-mediated immunity. These data demonstrate diversity in bacterial TIR signalling and reveal a new class of TIR-derived immune signalling molecules that combine nucleotide and amino acid moieties.</p>

PDB: 
8V3E (MoTad2), 9EIB (His-ADPR-bound MoTad2) and 8R66 (His-ADPR-bound BaMacro)
Beamline: 
24-ID-C
24-ID-E