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1.
The surface properties of colicin E1, a 522-amino acid protein, and its interaction with monolayers of Escherichia coli (E. coli) total lipid and 1,2-Dimyristoyl-sn-Glycero-3-Phosphocholine (DOPC) were studied using the Langmuir-Blodgett (LB) technique. Colicin E1 is amphiphilic, forming a protein monolayer at the air/buffer interface. The protein is thought to interact with the E. coli total lipid head groups through electrostatic interactions, followed by its insertion into the lipid monolayers. Supported lipid bilayers (SLBs) of E. coli total lipid and DOPC, deposited onto mica at the cell membrane equivalence pressure for E. coli and incubated with colicin E1, were imaged by contact mode atomic force microscopy (CM-AFM). Colicin E1 formed protein aggregates on DOPC SLBs, while E. coli total lipid SLB was deformed following its incubation with colicin E1. Corresponding lateral force images, along with electrostatic surface potentials for colicin E1 P190, imply a direct interaction of colicin E1 with lipid head groups facilitating their charge neutralization.  相似文献   

2.
The energy-dependent exchange of intracellular Mg(2+) with extracellular Mg(2+) or Co(2+) is inhibited by colicin E1 and, less strongly, by colicin K. Treatment with either colicin causes a net loss of intracellular Mg(2+). This loss begins immediately in cells treated with colicin E1, but in colicin K-treated cells the onset of Mg(2+) loss is delayed 1 to 10 min, depending upon the temperature and the multiplicity of colicin K. Both colicins differ from chemical inhibitors of energy-yielding metabolism; energy poisons block transport of Mg(2+) and Co(2+), but both colicins increase passive permeability to Mg(2+) and Co(2+). Inhibitors of energy-yielding metabolism (and of Mg(2+) exchange) block the initiation of Mg(2+) loss by either colicin, but do not stop colicin-promoted efflux once it has begun. Colicin E1 added before colicin K prevents the more rapid Mg(2+) efflux characteristic of colicin K-treated cells. Quantitative comparisons of the effects of colicins E1 and K upon permeability to Mg(2+) and Co(2+) lead us to conclude that the two colicins are not identical in their mode of action.  相似文献   

3.
The surface properties of colicin E1, a 522-amino acid protein, and its interaction with monolayers of Escherichia coli (E. coli) total lipid and 1,2-Dimyristoyl-sn-Glycero-3-Phosphocholine (DOPC) were studied using the Langmuir-Blodgett (LB) technique. Colicin E1 is amphiphilic, forming a protein monolayer at the air/buffer interface. The protein is thought to interact with the E. coli total lipid head groups through electrostatic interactions, followed by its insertion into the lipid monolayers. Supported lipid bilayers (SLBs) of E. coli total lipid and DOPC, deposited onto mica at the cell membrane equivalence pressure for E. coli and incubated with colicin E1, were imaged by contact mode atomic force microscopy (CM-AFM). Colicin E1 formed protein aggregates on DOPC SLBs, while E. coli total lipid SLB was deformed following its incubation with colicin E1. Corresponding lateral force images, along with electrostatic surface potentials for colicin E1 P190, imply a direct interaction of colicin E1 with lipid head groups facilitating their charge neutralization.  相似文献   

4.
The first step in the transport of cyanocobalamin (CN-B(12)) by cells of Escherichia coli was shown previously to consist of binding of the B(12) to specific receptor sites located on the outer membrane of the cell envelope. In this paper, evidence is presented that these B(12) receptor sites also function as the receptors for the E colicins, and that there is competition between B(12) and the E colicins for occupancy of these sites. The cell strains used were E. coli KBT001, a methionine/B(12) auxotroph, and B(12) transport mutants derived from strain KBT001. Colicins E1 and E3 inhibited binding of B(12) to the outer membrane B(12) receptor sites, and CN-B(12) protected cells against these colicins. Half-maximal protection was given by CN-B(12) concentrations in the range of 1 to 6 nM, depending upon the colicin concentration used. Colicin E1 competitively inhibited the binding of (57)Co-labeled CN-B(12) to isolated outer membrane particles. Functional colicin E receptor sites were found in cell envelopes from cells of only those strains that possessed intact B(12) receptors. Colicin K did not inhibit the binding of B(12) to the outer membrane receptor sites, and no evidence was found for any identity between the B(12) and colicin K receptors. However, both colicin K and colicin E1 inhibited the secondary phase of B(12) transport, which is believed to consist of the energy-coupled movement of B(12) across the inner membrane.  相似文献   

5.
Colicin E1 protein was labeled with 125I to specific activities of up to 2 × 108 cpm/mg of protein and with no loss of the colicin biological activity. The labeled colicin bound to colicin E1-sensitive, tolerant, and immune E1-colicinogenic Escherichia coli. An E. coli mutant resistant to colicin E1 exhibited a much lower colicin-binding capacity. The average number of bound colicin molecules per sensitive cell increased as a function of the colicin concentration in the colicin cell interaction mixture and continued to increase even after loss of viability of the entire culture. Up to 2,400 colicin E1 molecules bound per cell, but saturation was not reached. Binding kinetics showed that maximum binding occurred within 2 to 5 min of colicin addition. Survival and binding assays indicated that one colicin killing unit corresponded to an average of about 100 colicin molecules bound per bacterial cell. This number, however, decreased to about 8 in more extensively washed cells. Trypsin digestion of the colicin-treated cells removed the majority of the cell-bound colicin, but in general provided little rescue from colicin killing. At low colicin concentrations, a linear relationship existed between survival and the number of trypsin-inaccessible colicin molecules. Under these circumstances and in agreement with single-hit kinetics, the relationship between the number of colicin killing units and the number of trypsin-inaccessible colicin molecules was close to 1. After trypsin digestion, cells that were nearly saturated with colicin retained about 200 trypsin-inaccessible colicin molecules per cell. The trypsin-inaccessible colicin might represent those colicin molecules that bound to the specific E colicin receptors of E. coli cells.  相似文献   

6.
The channel activity of colicin E1 was studied in planar lipid bilayers and liposomes. Colicin E1 pore-forming activity was found to depend on the curvature of the lipid bilayer, as judged by the effect on channel activity of curvature-modulating agents. In particular, the colicin-induced trans-membrane current was augmented by lysophosphatidylcholine and reduced by oleic acid, agents promoting positive and negative membrane curvature, respectively. The data obtained imply direct involvement of lipids in the formation of colicin E1-induced pore walls. It is inferred that the toroidal pore model previously validated for small antimicrobial peptides is applicable to colicin E1, a large protein that contains ten alpha-helices in its pore-forming domain.  相似文献   

7.
Structure and dynamics of the colicin E1 channel   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
The toxin-like and bactericidal colicin E1 molecule is of interest for problems of toxin action, polypeptide translocation across membranes, voltage-gated channels, and receptor function. Colicin E1 binds to a receptor in the outer membrane and is translocated across the cell envelope to the inner membrane. Import of the colicin channel-forming domain into the inner membrane involves a translocation-competent intermediate state and a membrane potential-dependent movement of one third to one half of the channel peptide into the membrane bilayer. The voltage-gated channel has a conductance sufficiently large to depolarize the Escherichia coli cytoplasmic membrane. Amino acid residues that affect the channel ion selectivity have been identified by site-directed mutagenesis. The colicin E1 channel is one of a few membrane proteins whose secondary structures in the membrane, predominantly alpha-helix, have been determined by physico-chemical techniques. Hypothesis for the identity of the trans-membrane helices, and the mechanism of binding to the membrane, are influenced by the solved crystal structure of the soluble colicin A channel peptide. The protective action of immunity protein is a unique aspect of the colicin problem, and information has been obtained, by genetic techniques, about the probable membrane topography of the imm gene product.  相似文献   

8.
Bacteriophages and bacterial toxins are promising antibacterial agents to treat infections caused by multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacteria. In fact, bacteriophages have recently been successfully used to treat life-threatening infections caused by MDR bacteria (Schooley RT, Biswas B, Gill JJ, Hernandez-Morales A, Lancaster J, Lessor L, Barr JJ, Reed SL, Rohwer F, Benler S, et al. 2017. Development and use of personalized bacteriophage-based therapeutic cocktails to treat a patient with a disseminated resistant Acinetobacter baumannii infection. Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 61(10); Chan BK, Turner PE, Kim S, Mojibian HR, Elefteriades JA, Narayan D. 2018. Phage treatment of an aortic graft infected with Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Evol Med Public Health. 2018(1):60–66; Petrovic Fabijan A, Lin RCY, Ho J, Maddocks S, Ben Zakour NL, Iredell JR, Westmead Bacteriophage Therapy Team. 2020. Safety of bacteriophage therapy in severe Staphylococcus aureus infection. Nat Microbiol. 5(3):465–472). One potential problem with using these antibacterial agents is the evolution of resistance against them in the long term. Here, we studied the fitness landscape of the Escherichia coli TolC protein, an outer membrane efflux protein that is exploited by a pore forming toxin called colicin E1 and by TLS phage (Pagie L, Hogeweg P. 1999. Colicin diversity: a result of eco-evolutionary dynamics. J Theor Biol. 196(2):251–261; Andersen C, Hughes C, Koronakis V. 2000. Chunnel vision. Export and efflux through bacterial channel-tunnels. EMBO Rep. 1(4):313–318; Koronakis V, Andersen C, Hughes C. 2001. Channel-tunnels. Curr Opin Struct Biol. 11(4):403–407; Czaran TL, Hoekstra RF, Pagie L. 2002. Chemical warfare between microbes promotes biodiversity. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 99(2):786–790; Cascales E, Buchanan SK, Duché D, Kleanthous C, Lloubès R, Postle K, Riley M, Slatin S, Cavard D. 2007. Colicin biology. Microbiol Mol Biol Rev. 71(1):158–229). By systematically assessing the distribution of fitness effects of ∼9,000 single amino acid replacements in TolC using either positive (antibiotics and bile salts) or negative (colicin E1 and TLS phage) selection pressures, we quantified evolvability of the TolC. We demonstrated that the TolC is highly optimized for the efflux of antibiotics and bile salts. In contrast, under colicin E1 and TLS phage selection, TolC sequence is very sensitive to mutations. Finally, we have identified a large set of mutations in TolC that increase resistance of E. coli against colicin E1 or TLS phage without changing antibiotic susceptibility of bacterial cells. Our findings suggest that TolC is a highly evolvable target under negative selection which may limit the potential clinical use of bacteriophages and bacterial toxins if evolutionary aspects are not taken into account.  相似文献   

9.
Colicins translocate across the Escherichia coli outer membrane and periplasm by interacting with several receptors. After first binding to the outer membrane surface receptors via their central region, they interact with TolA or TonB proteins via their N-terminal region. Colicin N residues critical to TolA binding have been discovered, but the full extent of any colicin TolA site is unknown. We present, for the first time, a fully mapped TolA binding site for a colicin. It was determined through the use of alanine-scanning mutants, glutathione S-transferase fusion peptides and Biacore/fluorescence binding studies. The minimal TolA binding region is 27 residues and of similar size to the TolA binding region of bacteriophage g3p-D1 protein. Stopped-flow kinetic studies show that the binding to TolA follows slow association kinetics. The role of other E. coli Tol proteins in colicin translocation was also investigated. Isothermal titration microcalorimetry (ITC) and in vivo studies conclusively show that colicin N translocation does not require the presence of TolB. ITC also demonstrated colicin A interaction with TolB, and that colicin A in its native state does not interact with TolAII-III. Colicin N does not bind TolR-II. The TolA protein is shown to be unsuitable for direct immobilisation in Biacore analysis.  相似文献   

10.
G J Brewer 《Biochemistry》1976,15(7):1387-1392
The bacterial protein colicin K, when added to sensitive Escherichia coli in the presence of 3,3'-dihexyloxacarbocyanine, cuases a doubling in fluorescence of the probe. Glucose and oxygen cause a decreased fluorescence while anoxia and cyanide cause a rise in fluorescence. These results in conjunction with the work of other laboratories suggest that colicin K causes a depolarization of the transmembrane electrical potential. Fluorescence in the absence of colicin K was relatively independent of KCl, NaCl, and MgCl2 concentrations below 0.1 M. Although colicin K caused rapid efflux of the K+ analogue 86Rb+, the fluorescence rise was only partially blocked by 0.13 M KCl. The level of fluorescence caused by the action of colcin K was inversely proportional to the logarithm of the concentration of MgCl2 over the range of 2 muM to 4 mM. This suggests that a Nernst electrochemical potential for an anion can counteract a membrane depolarization caused by colcin. After colcin K action, the fluorescence of the carbocyanine could be further increased by anoxia or cyanide. The distribution of the weak base dimethyloxazolidinedione indicated that the pH in the interior of aerobic E. coli supplied with lactate was alkaline by 0.1 unit and unaffected by colicin. These results suggest that colicin K does not completely depolarize the membrane potential and does not interfere with the component of membrane energization generated by electron transport. Colicin K does not act as a cationophore. The partial depolarization of the membrane may account for the inhibition of active solute transport caused by colicin K.  相似文献   

11.

Background

Protein transport across cellular membranes is an important aspect of toxin biology. Escherichia coli cell killing by nuclease colicins occurs through DNA (DNases) or RNA (RNases) hydrolysis and to this end their cytotoxic domains require transportation across two sets of membranes. In order to begin to unravel the molecular mechanisms underlying the membrane translocation of colicin nuclease domains, we have analysed the membrane association of four DNase domains (E9, a charge reduction E9 mutant, E8, and E7) and one ribosomal RNase domain (E3) using a biomembrane model system.

Principal Results

We demonstrate, through the use of large unilamellar vesicles composed of synthetic and E. coli lipids and a membrane surface potential sensor, that the colicin nuclease domains bind anionic membranes only, with micromolar affinity and via a cooperative binding mechanism. The evaluation of the nuclease bilayer insertion depth, through a fluorescence quenching analysis using brominated lipids, indicates that the nucleases locate to differential regions in the bilayer. Colicin DNases target the interfacial region of the lipid bilayer, with the DNase E7 showing the deepest insertion, whereas the ribosomal RNase E3 penetrates into the hydrophobic core region of the bilayer. Furthermore, the membrane association of the DNase E7 and the ribosomal RNase E3 induces vesicle aggregation, lipid mixing and content leakage to a much larger extent than that of the other DNases analysed.

Conclusions/Significance

Our results show, for the first time, that after the initial electrostatically driven membrane association, the pleiotropic membrane effects induced by colicin nuclease domains relate to their bilayer insertion depth and may be linked to their in vivo membrane translocation.  相似文献   

12.
Colicin E3 was found to kill, under conditions of osmotic shock, cells lacking a functional outer membrane receptor (bfe). Under such conditions, component A of the colicin, carrying endonucleolytic activity, also killed bfe cells, whereas fragment T2, obtained by tryptic digestion of the colicin and also active endonucleolytically, was inactive. Tolerance to the colicin caused by defects in the outer membrane could be overcome by osmotic shock, whereas tolerance probably caused by an altered plasma membrane could not.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of nonreceptor adsorption on the lethal action of colicin E1   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The survivability of Escherichia coli K12s cells has been studied after treatment with 125I-labeled colicin E1. It has been shown that for low amounts of adsorbed colicin the survivability follows single-hit kinetics. When the number of colicin molecules adsorbed exceeds approx. 50 per cell, deviation from single-hit kinetics occurs towards higher survivability. Colicin E1 adsorbed nonreceptorwise by the cell's surface has been shown to inhibit the lethal action of colicin E1 molecules adsorbed at specific receptors. This fact has been used in accounting for the elevated survivability of cells at high colicin doses. The functional significance of the phenomenon is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
In vitro inactivation of ascites ribosomes by colicin E 3   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Colicin E 3 treatment of 80 S ribosomes from mouse ascites cells completely arrests in vitro protein synthesis. Isolated 40 S subunits are resistant to the colicin action while the larger subunit becomes inactivated after treatment with this protein. 40 S subunits derived from colicin E 3 treated 80 S ribosomes lose their ability to participate in polyphenylalanine synthesis. Colicin E 3 damaged 80 S ribosomes appear to be functional with regard to Met-tRNAfMet binding while they fail to attach Phe-tRNA to the A-site. Thus, except for the susceptibility of their larger subunits to colicin, the inactivation mechanism of 80 S particles resembles the process which alters the bacterial ribosome.  相似文献   

15.
The further identification of regions of the colicin E1 plasmid that affect plasmid functions has been achieved by studying deletions and TnA insertions of the plasmid. Colicin production, colicin immunity, relaxation of plasmid deoxyribonucleic acid, and plasmid incompatibility functions have been examined. A strong correlation has been observed between the ability of colicin E1 plasmid deoxyribonucleic acid to be relaxed and the ability of that plasmid to be transferred by conjugation.  相似文献   

16.
Release of colicin E2 from Escherichia coli.   总被引:4,自引:3,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Treatment of Escherichia coli K-12(ColE2.P9) with 500 ng of mitomycin C per ml resulted in rapid and almost synchronous colicin E2 production. Colicin accumulated outside the cytoplasmic membrane, most probably in the periplasmic space. Colicin release occurred during a period in which the turbidity of the culture declined markedly. Periplasmic alkaline phosphatase was released during the same period, but cytoplasmic beta-galactosidase release was delayed.  相似文献   

17.
Pore-forming colicins exert their lethal effect on E coli through formation of a voltage-dependent channel in the inner (cytoplasmic-membrane) thus destroying the energy potential of sensitive cells. Their mode of action appears to involve 3 steps: i) binding to a specific receptor located in the outer membrane; ii) translocation across this membrane; iii) insertion into the inner membrane. Colicin A has been used as a prototype of pore-forming colicins. In this review, the 3 functional domains of colicin A respectively involved in receptor binding, translocation and pore formation, are defined. The components of sensitive cells implicated in colicin uptake and their interactions with the various colicin A domains are described. The 3-dimensional structure of the pore-forming domain of colicin A has been determined recently. This structure suggests a model of insertion into the cytoplasmic membrane which is supported by model membrane studies. The role of the membrane potential in channel functioning is also discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Colicin synthesis and cell death.   总被引:6,自引:6,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Colicin E1 is a small plasmid, containing the cea gene for colicin, the most prominent product of the plasmid. Colicin is a 56-kilodalton bacteriocin which is especially toxic to Escherichia coli cells that do not contain the plasmid. Under normal growth conditions very low levels of the plasmid are produced as a result of cea gene repression by the host LexA protein. Conditions that lower the concentration of LexA protein result in elevated levels of colicin synthesis. The LexA protein concentration can be lowered by exposing the cells to DNA-damaging reagents such as UV light or mitomycin C. This is because DNA damage signals the host SOS response; the response leads to activation of the RecA protease which degrades the LexA protein. DNA-damaging reagents result in very high levels of colicin synthesis and subsequent death of plasmid-bearing cells. Elevated levels of colicin are also produced in mutants of E. coli that are deficient in LexA protein. We found that comparably high levels of colicin can be produced in such mutants in the absence of cell death. In lexA strains carrying a defective LexA repressor, colicin synthesis shows a strong temperature dependence. Ten to twenty times more colicin is synthesized at 42 degrees C. This sharp dependence of synthesis on temperature suggests that there are factors other than the LexA protein which regulate colicin synthesis.  相似文献   

19.
The interaction of colicins with target cells is a paradigm for protein import. To enter cells, bactericidal colicins parasitize Escherichia coli outer membrane receptors whose physiological purpose is the import of essential metabolites. Colicins E1 and E3 initially bind to the BtuB receptor, whose beta-barrel pore is occluded by an N-terminal globular "plug". The x-ray structure of a complex of BtuB with the coiled-coil BtuB-binding domain of colicin E3 did not reveal displacement of the BtuB plug that would allow passage of the colicin (Kurisu, G., S. D. Zakharov, M. V. Zhalnina, S. Bano, V. Y. Eroukova, T. I. Rokitskaya, Y. N. Antonenko, M. C. Wiener, and W. A. Cramer. 2003. Nat. Struct. Biol. 10:948-954). This correlates with the inability of BtuB to form ion channels in planar bilayers, shown in this work, suggesting that an additional outer membrane protein(s) is required for colicin import across the outer membrane. The identity and interaction properties of this OMP were analyzed in planar bilayer experiments.OmpF and TolC channels in planar bilayers were occluded by colicins E3 and E1, respectively, from the trans-side of the membrane. Occlusion was dependent upon a cis-negative transmembrane potential. A positive potential reversibly opened OmpF and TolC channels. Colicin N, which uses only OmpF for entry, occludes OmpF in planar bilayers with the same orientation constraints as colicins E1 and E3. The OmpF recognition sites of colicins E3 and N, and the TolC recognition site of colicin E1, were found to reside in the N-terminal translocation domains. These data are considered in the context of a two-receptor translocon model for colicin entry into cells.  相似文献   

20.
Colicin V-treated Escherichia coli does not generate membrane potential.   总被引:16,自引:6,他引:10  
Colicin V-treated Escherichia coli was inhibited in its capacity to carry out active transport of proline and was unable to generate a membrane potential. Colicin V also prevented membrane potential formation by isolated cytoplasmic membrane vesicles. We conclude that a primary effect of this colicin involves the cytoplasmic membrane as a target.  相似文献   

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