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1.
Vibrio cholerae hemolysin (HlyA) is a 65-kDa water-soluble pore-forming toxin that causes lysis of eukaryotic cells by destroying selective permeability of the plasma membrane bilayer. The HlyA monomer self-assembles on the target cell surface to the more stable β-barrel amphipathic heptamer, which inserts into the membrane bilayer to form a diffusion channel. Deletion of the 15-kDa β-prism lectin domain at the C terminus generates a 50-kDa hemolysin variant (HlyA50) with an ∼1,000-fold decrease in hemolytic activity. Because functional differences are eventually dictated by structural differences, we determined three-dimensional structures of 65- and 50-kDa HlyA oligomers, using cryo-electron microscopy and single-particle methods. Our study clearly shows that the HlyA oligomer has sevenfold symmetry but that the HlyA50 oligomer is an asymmetric molecule. The HlyA oligomer has bowl-like, arm-like, and ring-like domains. The bowl-like domain is coupled with the ring-like domain, and seven side openings are present just beneath the ring-like domain. Although a central channel is present in both HlyA and HlyA50 oligomers, they differ in pore size as well as in shape of the molecules and channel. These structural differences may be relevant to the striking difference in efficiencies of functional channel formation by the two toxin forms.Vibrio cholerae, a Gram-negative bacterium, is the causative agent of cholera in humans (9). The severe diarrhea of cholera is due primarily to the effects of cholera enterotoxin upon the small intestine epithelial cells (3). In addition to cholera toxin (9), most Vibrio cholerae strains secrete a membrane-damaging protein, designated cholera hemolysin (HlyA) (27) or cytolysin/hemolysin (VCC), with cytotoxic and cytolytic activity toward a wide spectrum of eukaryotic cells. VCC is an extracellular pore-forming toxin (PFT) (26) that exists in two stable forms: one is a water-soluble monomer with a molecular mass of 65 kDa (5, 6, 27, 31), and the other is a β-barrel amphipathic heptamer. The VCC monomer interacts with a cell surface receptor(s), self-assembles to an amphipathic β-barrel by circular oligomerization, and inserts into the membrane lipid bilayer (2, 7, 14, 21). Despite individual variations that depend on amino acid sequence, three-dimensional (3D) structure, and receptor specificity, PFTs have evolved a strikingly common strategy to destroy the permeability barrier of the target cell membrane (16). The soluble PFT monomer interacts with the target cell, self-assembles into an amphipathic β-barrel by circular oligomerization, and translocates from the cell surface or lipid-water interface to the core of the lipid bilayer, forming a transmembrane pore (5, 6).HlyA is expressed as an 82-kDa preprohemolysin protein, and following removal of the signal sequence, the protein is excreted during in vitro growth as the 79-kDa prohemolysin (proHlyA) (28). Proteolytic removal of 132 residues from the N-terminal region generates the mature 65-kDa HlyA, with a specific hemolytic activity of ∼100 pM toward rabbit erythrocytes (15). The mature toxin has a central cytolytic domain involved in oligomerization and anchoring to the hydrophobic core of the bilayer, followed by two lectin domains homologous to the carbohydrate-binding domains of the plant lectins ricin and jacalin (17). Proteolytic deletion of the 15-kDa β-prism lectin domain, which is apparently involved in specific interaction with β-galactosyl-terminated glycoconjugates (21), from the carboxy-terminal end of the 65-kDa mature hemolysin generates the truncated 50-kDa hemolysin (HlyA50) (8, 29). This truncated 50-kDa hemolysin (HlyA50) retains the oligomerization and membrane-anchoring domains (17, 18) and resembles the mature toxin in surface amphipathicity, nonspecific interaction with target biomembrane and lipid vesicles, and ability to undergo lipid-induced oligomerization (30). HlyA50 is about 1,000-fold less active than HlyA toward rabbit erythrocytes (29, 30), suggesting that the HlyA50 oligomer might be less capable of adopting an insertion-competent configuration.In the present study, we have attempted to determine the three-dimensional structures of the oligomers generated by the 65-kDa Vibrio cholerae hemolysin and the 50-kDa hemolysin, using cryo-electron microscopy and single-particle analysis techniques. Determination of the three-dimensional structure is important, as it might shed light on the shape of the transmembrane channel as well as on the anchoring and insertion processes of the two toxin forms.  相似文献   

2.
Vibrio cholerae hemolysin (HlyA) is a pore-forming toxin that exists in two stable forms: a hemolytically active water-soluble monomer with a native molecular weight of 65,000 and a hemolytically inactive SDS-stable heptamer with the configuration of a transmembrane diffusion channel. Transformation of the monomer into the oligomer is spontaneous but very slow in the absence of interaction with specific membrane components like cholesterol and sphingolipids. In this report, we show that mild disruption of the native tertiary structure of HlyA by 1.75 M urea triggered rapid and quantitative conversion of the monomer to an oligomer. Furthermore, the HlyA monomer when unfolded in 8 M urea refolded and reconstituted on renaturation into the oligomer biochemically and functionally similar to the heptamer formed in target lipid bilayer, suggesting that the HlyA polypeptide had a strong propensity to adopt the oligomer as the stable native state in preference to the monomer. On the basis of our results, we propose that (a) the hemolytically active HlyA monomer represents a quasi-stable conformation corresponding to a local free energy minimum and the transmembrane heptameric pore represents a stable conformation corresponding to an absolute free energy minimum and (b) any perturbation of the native tertiary structure of the HlyA monomer causing relaxation of conformational constraints tends to promote self-assembly to the oligomer with membrane components playing at most an accessory role.  相似文献   

3.
Vibrio cholerae hemolysin (HlyA), a water-soluble protein with a native monomeric relative molecular mass of 65 000, forms transmembrane pentameric channels in target biomembranes. The HlyA binds to lipid vesicles nonspecifically and without saturation; however, self-assembly is triggered specifically by cholesterol. Here we show that the HlyA partitioned quantitatively to amphiphilic media irrespective of their compositions, indicating that the toxin had an amphiphilic surface. Asialofetuin, a beta1-galactosyl-terminated glycoprotein, which binds specifically to the HlyA in a lectin-glycoprotein type of interaction and inhibits carbohydrate-independent interaction of the toxin with lipid, reduced effective amphiphilicity of the toxin significantly. Resistance of the HlyA to proteases together with the tryptophan fluorescence emission spectrum suggested a compact structure for the toxin. Fluorescence energy transfer from the HlyA to dansyl-phosphatidylethanolamine required the presence of cholesterol in the lipid bilayer and was synchronous with oligomerization. Phospholipid bilayer without cholesterol caused a partial unfolding of the HlyA monomer as indicated by the transfer of tryptophan residues from the nonpolar core of the protein to a more polar region. These observations suggested: (a) partitioning of the HlyA to lipid vesicles is driven by the tendency of the amphiphilic toxin to reduce energetically unfavorable contacts with water and is not affected significantly by the composition of the vesicles; and (b) partial unfolding of the HlyA at the lipid-water interface precedes and promotes cholesterol-induced oligomerization to an insertion-competent configuration.  相似文献   

4.
A new toxin of Enterobacter cloacae able to lyse erythrocytes and leukocytes was found. Purification of the toxin was performed by salt precipitation, gel filtration, ion exchange and HPLC in C8 column. SDS-PAGE electrophoresis showed more than one bank corresponding to the leukotoxin able to form polymers and aggregate like some pore-forming cytotoxins (RTX). In culture supernatant the toxin showed 1 HU/ml (hemolytic unit) and 1.5 LU/ml (leukotoxic unit); after purification it reached 15 HU/ml and 20 LU/ml. The ratio between HU and percentage red cells affected the lytic capacity. E. cloacae toxin stimulated the oxidative metabolism of neutrophils, but over 50 μg toxin/ml the stimulus ceased as it was shown by NBT assay due to cell death. Chemiluminescence evidenced an increase in superoxide anion generation, but an excess of toxin interfered with this stimulus, as was previously observed in HlyA Escherichia coli toxin. Cross-reaction was found by immunoblotting with this HlyA. E. cloacae toxin presented higher amounts of proline, valine, aspartic and glutamic acids than HlyA. E. cloacae toxin was similar to HlyA in the prescence of a glycine-rich DNA sequence and in the observed effect of calcium on toxin activity. E. cloacae toxin did not cross-react by immunoblotting with hemolysin HmpA of Proteus. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

5.
Pathogenic Vibrio cholerae secrete V. cholerae cytolysin (VCC), an 80 kDa pro-toxin that assembles into an oligomeric pore on target cell membranes following proteolytic cleavage and interaction with cell surface receptors. To gain insight into the activation and targeting activities of VCC, we solved the crystal structure of the pro-toxin at 2.3A by X-ray diffraction. The core cytolytic domain of VCC shares a fold similar to the staphylococcal pore-forming toxins, but in VCC an amino-terminal pro-domain and two carboxy-terminal lectin domains decorate the cytolytic domain. The pro-domain masks a protomer surface that likely participates in inter-protomer interactions in the cytolytic oligomer, thereby explaining why proteolytic cleavage and movement of the pro-domain is necessary for toxin activation. A single beta-octyl glucoside molecule outlines a possible receptor binding site on one lectin domain, and removal of this domain leads to a tenfold decrease in lytic activity toward rabbit erythrocytes. VCC activated by proteolytic cleavage assembles into an oligomeric species upon addition of soybean asolectin/cholesterol liposomes and this oligomer was purified in detergent micelles. Analytical ultracentrifugation and crystallographic analysis indicate that the resulting VCC oligomer is a heptamer. Taken together, these studies define the architecture of a pore forming toxin and associated lectin domains, confirm the stoichiometry of the assembled oligomer as heptameric, and suggest a common mechanism of assembly for staphylococcal and Vibrio cytolytic toxins.  相似文献   

6.
α-Hemolysin (HlyA) is a protein toxin, a member of the pore-forming Repeat in Toxin (RTX) family, secreted by some pathogenic strands of Escherichia coli. The mechanism of action of this toxin seems to involve three stages that ultimately lead to cell lysis: binding, insertion, and oligomerization of the toxin within the membrane. Since the influence of phase segregation on HlyA binding and insertion in lipid membranes is not clearly understood, we explored at the meso- and nanoscale—both in situ and in real-time—the interaction of HlyA with lipid monolayers and bilayers. Our results demonstrate that HlyA could insert into monolayers of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine/sphingomyelin/cholesterol (DOPC/16:0SM/Cho) and DOPC/24:1SM/Cho. The time course for HlyA insertion was similar in both lipidic mixtures. HlyA insertion into DOPC/16:0SM/Cho monolayers, visualized by Brewster-angle microscopy (BAM), suggest an integration of the toxin into both the liquid-ordered and liquid-expanded phases. Atomic-force-microscopy imaging reported that phase boundaries favor the initial binding of the toxin, whereas after a longer time period the HlyA becomes localized into the liquid-disordered (Ld) phases of supported planar bilayers composed of DOPC/16:0SM/Cho. Our AFM images, however, showed that the HlyA interaction does not appear to match the general strategy described for other invasive proteins. We discuss these results in terms of the mechanism of action of HlyA.  相似文献   

7.
Cry toxins form lytic pores in the insect midgut cells. The role of receptor interaction in the process of protoxin activation was analyzed. Incubation of Cry1Ab protoxin with a single chain antibody that mimics the cadherin-like receptor and treatment with Manduca sexta midgut juice or trypsin, resulted in toxin preparations with high pore-forming activity in vitro. This activity correlates with the formation of a 250 kDa oligomer that lacks the helix alpha-1 of domain I. The oligomer, in contrast with the 60 kDa monomer, was capable of membrane insertion as judged by 8-anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonate binding. Cry1Ab protoxin was also activated to a 250 kDa oligomer by incubation with brush border membrane vesicles, presumably by the action of a membrane-associated protease. Finally, a model where receptor binding allows the efficient cleavage of alpha-1 and formation of a pre-pore oligomeric structure that is efficient in pore formation, is presented.  相似文献   

8.
A major outer membrane protein with an apparent molecular weight of 42 kDa was purified from Serratia liquefaciens grown on Brain Heart Infusion medium. The same protein was obtained when the cells were grown on a synthetic medium supplemented with 2% glucose. The amino acid composition of this protein revealed it to be hydrophilic. The pore-forming ability of the 42-kDa protein was determined by the liposome swelling assay. This assay demonstrated that the protein forms nonspecific channels with a diameter between 1.16 and 1.6 nm. An additional protein with a molecular weight of 47 kDa was obtained on synthetic medium supplemented with maltose. This protein exhibited specific pore-forming ability to maltose and maltodextrins, but was also permeable to other compounds, according to their size. When bacteria were grown on Nutrient Broth medium, two outer membrane proteins with molecular weights of 41 kDa and 42 kDa were produced by the bacteria. All three types of proteins represent monomers of respective oligomers. The monomers did not exhibit pore-forming ability when incorporated into liposomes. We, therefore, propose that the oligomer is the functional unit of a porin capable of forming permeability channels in the outer membrane of Serratia liquefaciens. These results indicate that S. liquefaciens contains several porins exhibiting specific osmoregulation or that are induced by a specific nutrient, where the 42-kDa outer membrane protein of this bacterium is certainly a major porin. Received: 6 July 1998 / Accepted: 19 August 1998  相似文献   

9.
Vibrio cholerae cytolysin (VCC) is a pore-forming toxin that inserts a lytic water-filled channel into susceptible host membranes. Assembly of the toxin on cell surfaces may be enhanced by two tandem lectin domains, in addition to direct interactions with lipids and cholesterol within the membrane itself. We used single-particle electron cryomicroscopy (cryoEM) to generate a low-resolution molecular structure of the detergent-solubilized VCC oligomer to 20 Å resolution. After confirming a heptameric arrangement of individual protomers, sevenfold averaging around the central pore was utilized to improve the structure. Docking of the previously determined VCC protoxin crystal structure was possible with rigid-body rearrangements between the cytolytic and lectin domains. A second cryoEM reconstruction of a truncated VCC mutant supported the topology of our model in which the carboxyl-terminal lectin domain forms “spikes” around the toxin core with the putative carbohydrate receptor-binding site accessible on the surface of the oligomer. This finding points to an assembly mechanism in which lectin domains may remain bound to receptors on the cell surface throughout assembly of the cytolytic toxin core and explains the hemagglutinating activity of purified toxin. Our model provides an insight into the structural rearrangements that accompany VCC-mediated cytolysis and may aid in the engineering of novel pore-forming toxins to attack specific cells towards therapeutic ends.  相似文献   

10.
Vibrio cholerae cytolysin (VCC), a β-barrel pore-forming toxin (β-PFT), induces killing of the target eukaryotic cells by forming heptameric transmembrane β-barrel pores. Consistent with the β-PFT mode of action, binding of the VCC toxin monomers with the target cell membrane triggers formation of pre-pore oligomeric intermediates, followed by membrane insertion of the β-strands contributed by the pre-stem motif within the central cytolysin domain of each protomer. It has been shown previously that blocking of membrane insertion of the VCC pre-stem motif arrests conversion of the pre-pore state to the functional transmembrane pore. Consistent with the generalized β-PFT mechanism, it therefore appears that the VCC pre-stem motif plays a critical role toward forming the structural scaffold of the transmembrane β-barrel pore. It is, however, still not known whether the pre-stem motif plays any role in the membrane interaction process, and subsequent pre-pore structure formation by VCC. In this direction, we have constructed a recombinant variant of VCC deleting the pre-stem region, and have characterized the effect(s) of physical absence of the pre-stem motif on the distinct steps of the membrane pore-formation process. Our results show that the deletion of the pre-stem segment does not affect membrane binding and pre-pore oligomer formation by the toxin, but it critically abrogates the functional pore-forming activity of VCC. Present study extends our insights regarding the structure–function mechanism associated with the membrane pore formation by VCC, in the context of the β-PFT mode of action.  相似文献   

11.
Escherichia coli α-hemolysin (HlyA) is a pore-forming protein of 110 kDa belonging to the family of RTX toxins. A hydrophobic region between the amino acid residues 238 and 410 in the N-terminal half of HlyA has previously been suggested to form hydrophobic and/or amphipathic α-helices and has been shown to be important for hemolytic activity and pore formation in biological and artificial membranes. The structure of the HlyA transmembrane channel is, however, largely unknown. For further investigation of the channel structure, we deleted in HlyA different stretches of amino acids that could form amphipathic β-strands according to secondary structure predictions (residues 71–110, 158–167, 180–203, and 264–286). These deletions resulted in HlyA mutants with strongly reduced hemolytic activity. Lipid bilayer measurements demonstrated that HlyAΔ71–110 and HlyAΔ264–286 formed channels with much smaller single-channel conductance than wildtype HlyA, whereas their channel-forming activity was virtually as high as that of the wildtype toxin. HlyAΔ158–167 and HlyAΔ180–203 were unable to form defined channels in lipid bilayers. Calculations based on the single-channel data indicated that the channels generated by HlyAΔ71–110 and HlyAΔ264–286 had a smaller size (diameter about 1.4 to 1.8 nm) than wildtype HlyA channels (diameter about 2.0 to 2.6 nm), suggesting that in these mutants part of the channel-forming domain was removed. Osmotic protection experiments with erythrocytes confirmed that HlyA, HlyAΔ71–110, and HlyAΔ264–286 form defined transmembrane pores and suggested channel diameters that largely agreed with those estimated from the single-channel data. Taken together, these results suggest that the channel-forming domain of HlyA might contain β-strands, possibly in addition to α-helical structures.  相似文献   

12.
Herlax V  Bakas L 《Biochemistry》2007,46(17):5177-5184
Alpha-hemolysin (HlyA) is a pore-forming toxin secreted by pathogenic strains of Escherichia coli. The toxin is synthesized as a protoxin, ProHlyA, which is matured in the cytosol to the active form by acylation at two internal lysines, K563 and K689 (HlyA). It is widely known that the presence of fatty acids is crucial for the hemolytic and cytotoxic effects of the toxin. However, no detailed physicochemical characterization of the structural changes produced by fatty acids in the soluble protein prior to membrane binding has been carried out to date. The effects of chemical denaturants, the ANS binding parameters (Kd and n) and the sensitivity to proteases were compared between the acylated and unacylated protein forms HlyA and ProHlyA. Our results are consistent with a molten globular form of the acylated protein. Moreover, because molten globule proteins are intrinsically disordered proteins, using disorder prediction analyses, we show that HlyA contains 9 regions composed of 10-30 natively disordered amino acids. We propose that this conformation induced by covalently bound fatty acids might provide HlyA with the ability to bind to a variety of molecules during its action mechanism.  相似文献   

13.
alpha-Hemolysin (HlyA) is an extracellular protein toxin (117 kDa) secreted by Escherichia coli that targets the plasma membranes of eukaryotic cells. We studied the interaction of this toxin with membranes using planar phospholipid bilayers. For all lipid mixtures tested, addition of nanomolar concentrations of toxin resulted in an increase of membrane conductance and a decrease in membrane stability. HlyA decreased membrane lifetime up to three orders of magnitude in a voltage-dependent manner. Using a theory for lipidic pore formation, we analyzed these data to quantify how HlyA diminished the line tension of the membrane (i.e., the energy required to form the edge of a new pore). However, in contrast to the expectation that adding the positive curvature agent lysophosphatidylcholine would synergistically lower line tension, its addition significantly stabilized HlyA-treated membranes. HlyA also appeared to thicken bilayers to which it was added. We discuss these results in terms of models for proteolipidic pores.  相似文献   

14.
Vibrio cholerae hemolysin (HlyA) displays bipartite property while supervising macrophages (MΦ). The pore-forming toxin causes profound apoptosis within 3 h of exposure and in parallel supports activation of the defying MΦ. HlyA-induced apoptosis of MΦ remains steady for 24 h, is Toll-like receptor (TLR)-independent, and is driven by caspase-9 and caspase-7, thus involving the mitochondrial or intrinsic pathway. Cell activation is carried forward by time dependent up-regulation of varying TLRs. The promiscuous TLR association of HlyA prompted investigation, which revealed the β-prism lectin domain of HlyA simulated TLR4 up-regulation by jacalin, a plant lectin homologue besides expressing CD86 and type I cytokines TNF-α and IL-12. However, HlyA cytolytic protein domain up-regulated TLR2, which controlled CD40 for continuity of cell activation. Expression of TOLLIP before TLR2 and TLR6 abrogated TLR4, CD40, and CD86. We show that the transient expression of TOLLIP leading to curbing of activation-associated capabilities is a plausible feedback mechanism of MΦ to deploy TLR2 and prolong activation involving CD40 to encounter the HlyA cytolysin domain.  相似文献   

15.
Uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC), which are the leading cause of both acute and chronic urinary tract infections, often secrete a labile pore-forming toxin known as α-hemolysin (HlyA). We show that stable insertion of HlyA into epithelial cell and macrophage membranes triggers degradation of the cytoskeletal scaffolding protein paxillin and other host regulatory proteins, as well as components of the proinflammatory NFκB signaling cascade. Proteolysis of these factors requires host serine proteases, and paxillin degradation specifically involves the serine protease mesotrypsin. The induced activation of mesotrypsin by HlyA is preceded by redistribution of mesotrypsin precursors from the cytosol into foci along microtubules and within nuclei. HlyA intoxication also stimulated caspase activation, which occurred independently of effects on host serine proteases. HlyA-induced proteolysis of host proteins likely allows UPEC to not only modulate epithelial cell?functions, but also disable macrophages and suppress inflammatory responses.  相似文献   

16.
Uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC) are the major cause of urinary tract infections (UTIs), and they have the capacity to induce the death and exfoliation of target uroepithelial cells. This process can be facilitated by the pore-forming toxin alpha-hemolysin (HlyA), which is expressed and secreted by many UPEC isolates. Here, we demonstrate that HlyA can potently inhibit activation of Akt (protein kinase B), a key regulator of host cell survival, inflammatory responses, proliferation, and metabolism. HlyA ablates Akt activation via an extracellular calcium-dependent, potassium-independent process requiring HlyA insertion into the host plasma membrane and subsequent pore formation. Inhibitor studies indicate that Akt inactivation by HlyA involves aberrant stimulation of host protein phosphatases. We found that two other bacterial pore-forming toxins (aerolysin from Aeromonas species and alpha-toxin from Staphylococcus aureus) can also markedly attenuate Akt activation in a dose-dependent manner. These data suggest a novel mechanism by which sublytic concentrations of HlyA and other pore-forming toxins can modulate host cell survival and inflammatory pathways during the course of a bacterial infection.  相似文献   

17.
alpha-Hemolysin (HlyA) is a protein toxin (107 kDa) secreted by some pathogenic strains of E. coli. Several studies suggested the relationship between HlyA and lipopolysaccharide (LPS). We have studied experimentally the role of LPS on the stability and function of this toxin. The HlyA conformation in both, LPS-free and LPS-bound forms was investigated by tryptophan fluorescence. Studies about HlyA thermal and chemical denaturation indicated that its stability increased in the presence of LPS. On the other hand, the presence of negative and polar residues on the LPS reduced the tendency of HlyA to self-aggregation, and they may be the reservoir of calcium, cation essential for the lytic action of this toxin on red blood cells. These results suggest that HlyA and LPS are combined mainly via hydrophobic force to form an active toxin which stability is favored by the LPS.  相似文献   

18.
The relatively simple type 1 secretion system in Gram-negative bacteria is nevertheless capable of transporting polypeptides of up to 800 kDa across the cell envelope in a few seconds. The translocator is composed of an ABC-transporter, providing energy through ATP hydrolysis (and perhaps the initial channel across the inner membrane), linked to a multimeric Membrane Fusion Protein (MFP) spanning the initial part of the periplasm and forming a continuous channel to the surface with an outer membrane trimeric protein. Proteins targeted to the translocator carry an (uncleaved), poorly conserved secretion signal of approximately 50 residues. In E. coli the HlyA toxin interacts with both the MFP (HlyD) and the ABC protein HlyB, (a half transporter) triggering, via a conformational change in HlyD, recruitment of the third component, TolC, into the transenvelope complex. In vitro, HlyA, through its secretion signal, binds to the nucleotide binding domain (NBD or ABC-ATPase) of HlyB in a reaction reversible by ATP that may mimic initial movement of HlyA into the translocation channel. HlyA is then transported rapidly, apparently in an unfolded form, to the cell surface, where folding and release takes place. Whilst recent structural studies of TolC and MFP-like proteins are providing atomic detail of much of the transport path, structural analysis of the HlyB NBD and other ABC ATPases, have revealed details of the catalytic cycle within an NBD dimer and a glimpse of how the action of HlyB is coupled to the translocation of HlyA.  相似文献   

19.
Identification of functional domains of Clostridium septicum alpha toxin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Melton-Witt JA  Bentsen LM  Tweten RK 《Biochemistry》2006,45(48):14347-14354
Alpha toxin (AT) is the major virulence factor of Clostridium septicum that is a proteolytically activated pore-forming toxin that belongs to the aerolysin-like family of toxins. AT is predicted to be a three-domain molecule on the basis of its functional and sequence similarity with aerolysin, for which the crystal structure has been determined. In this study, we have substituted the entire primary structure of AT with alanine or cysteine to identify those amino acids that comprise functional domains involved in receptor binding, oligomerization, and pore formation. These studies revealed that receptor binding is restricted to domain 1 of the AT structure, whereas domains 1 and 3 are involved in oligomerization. These studies also revealed the presence of a putative functional region of AT proximal to the receptor-binding domain but distal from the pore-forming domain that is proposed to regulate the insertion of the transmembrane beta-hairpin of the prepore oligomer.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract

Uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC), especially associated with severe urinary tract infections (UTI) pathologies, harbors an important virulence factor known as α-hemolysin (110?kDa). Hemolytic activity of α-hemolysin (HlyA) requires modification (acylation) of two lysine residues of HlyA by HlyC, part of operon hlyCABD. Most of the previous studies had used whole operon hlyCABD and gene tolC cloning for the production of active α-hemolysin. Studies involving α-hemolysin are limited due to the cumbersome and manual method of purification for this toxin. Here, we report a simple method for production of both active and inactive recombinant α-hemolysin by cloning only hlyA and hlyC genes of operon hlyCABD. Presence of both active and inactive α-hemolysin would be advantageous for functional characterization. After translation, the yield of the purified α-hemolysin was 1?mg/200?ml. Functionality of the recombinant α-hemolysin protein was confirmed using hemolytic assay. This is the first report of the production of active and inactive recombinant α-hemolysin for functional studies.  相似文献   

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