The article examines the intricate mechanism used by umbrella toxins—complex antibacterial particles secreted by Streptomyces—for competition. This mechanism relies on UmbA lectin domains mediating species-specific binding to a novel cell surface carbohydrate receptor: the teichuronic acid-wall teichoic acid (TUA-WTA) hybrid. Resistance studies and cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) confirmed that the toxin's lectin domain specifically recognizes the hypervariable TUA polymer, allowing target cell adhesion. The study concludes that the widespread genomic diversity observed in both the UmbA lectins and the separate internal UmbC toxin domains represents an evolutionary two-tiered molecular bet-hedging strategy. This modular approach allows the bacteria to maintain antagonism against a broad range of changing competitive threats.
References:
- Zhao Q, Vlach J, Park Y J, et al. The unique architecture of umbrella toxins permits a two-tiered molecular bet-hedging strategy for interbacterial antagonism[J]. Cell, 2025.