首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Growth of E. coli K-12 under severe iron stress results in increased production of the outer membrane receptors for colicins B, D, Ib and M. The increase in colicin receptor activity coincides with the appearance of large amounts of two high molecular weight proteins in the outer membrane of the cells. These proteins are identified as the outer membrane receptors for colicins B and D and for colicin M. Mutants lacking a functional outer membrane receptor for colicins B and D are defective in the uptake of iron complexed with the siderochrome enterochelin, and are thus comparable with tonA mutants which lack a functional receptor for colicin M and are defective in the uptake of iron complexed with ferrichrome (6). The colicin B and D receptor may therefore function in the uptake of ferri-enterochelin.  相似文献   

2.
C J Lazdunski 《Biochimie》1988,70(9):1291-1296
Colicins are bacterial toxins encoded by plasmids which also confer immunity to producing cells. In a first stage, colicins are synthesized in the cytoplasm of colicinogenic cells. Subsequently they are released into the extracellular medium following the action of a small protein synthesized coordinately with the colicins. This protein is a lipoprotein and causes a non-specific increase in the envelope permeability, in particular, through the activation of an outer membrane phospholipase. After release into the medium, colicins kill sensitive cells in 3 defined steps: adsorption onto a specific receptor at the surface of the bacterium, translocation across the outer membrane and action. A specific domain of the colicin molecule is responsible for each of these steps. The most common colicins are those which kill by depolarizing the cytoplasmic membrane with the formation of voltage-dependent ionic channels. Immunity is conferred to producing cells by a membrane protein which interacts with the colicin and prevents formation or functioning of these ionic channels formed by its C-terminal domain.  相似文献   

3.
The Tol proteins are involved in outer membrane stability of Gram-negative bacteria. The TolQRA proteins form a complex in the inner membrane while TolB and Pal interact near the outer membrane. These two complexes are transiently connected by an energy-dependent interaction between Pal and TolA. The Tol proteins have been parasitized by group A colicins for their translocation through the cell envelope. Recent advances in the structure and energetics of the Tol system, as well as the interactions between the N-terminal translocation domain of colicins and the Tol proteins are presented.  相似文献   

4.
The mechanisms by which colicins, protein toxins produced by Escherichia coli, kill other E. coli, have become much better understood in recent years. Most colicins initially bind to an outer membrane protein receptor, and then search for a separate nearby outer membrane protein translocator that serves as a pathway into target cells. Many colicins use the outer membrane porin, OmpF, as that translocator, while using a different primary receptor. Colicin N is unique among known colicins in that only OmpF had been identified as being required for uptake of the colicin and it was presumed to somehow serve as both receptor and translocator. Genetic screens also identified a number of genes required for lipopolysaccharide (LPS) synthesis as uniquely required for killing by colicin N, but not by other colicins. Johnson et al. show that the receptor‐binding domain of colicin N binds to LPS, and does not require OmpF for that binding. LPS of a minimal length is required for binding, explaining the requirement for specific elements of the LPS biosynthetic pathway. For colicin N, the receptor‐binding domain does not recognize a protein, but rather the most abundant component of the outer membrane itself, LPS.  相似文献   

5.
It has long been suggested that the import of nuclease colicins requires protein processing; however it had never been formally demonstrated. Here we show that two RNase colicins, E3 and D, which appropriate two different translocation machineries to cross the outer membrane (BtuB/Tol and FepA/TonB, respectively), undergo a processing step inside the cell that is essential to their killing action. We have detected the presence of the C-terminal catalytic domains of these colicins in the cytoplasm of target bacteria. The same processed forms were identified in both colicin-sensitive cells and in cells immune to colicin because of the expression of the cognate immunity protein. We demonstrate that the inner membrane protease FtsH is necessary for the processing of colicins D and E3 during their import. We also show that the signal peptidase LepB interacts directly with the central domain of colicin D in vitro and that it is a specific but not a catalytic requirement for in vivo processing of colicin D. The interaction of colicin D with LepB may ensure a stable association with the inner membrane that in turn allows the colicin recognition by FtsH. We have also shown that the outer membrane protease OmpT is responsible for alternative and distinct endoproteolytic cleavages of colicins D and E3 in vitro, presumably reflecting its known role in the bacterial defense against antimicrobial peptides. Even though the OmpT-catalyzed in vitro cleavage also liberates the catalytic domain from colicins D and E3, it is not involved in the processing of nuclease colicins during their import into the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Nine classes of group B colicin-resistant mutants were examined to study the role of enterochelin in colicin resistance. Four of the mutants studied (cbt, exbC, exbB, and tonB) hypersecreted enterochelin. Enterochelin hypersecretion was apparently responsible for resistance of the exbC mutant to colicins G and H and for resistance of the exbB mutant to colicins G, H, Ia, Ib, S1, and V. All four mutants scored as colicin B tolerant, even in the absence of enterochelin synthesis. The mutants produced substantially increased amounts of two high-molecular-weight outer membrane polypeptides when grown under limiting iron conditions. The presence of these polypeptides was correlated with increased colicin B-neutralizing activity in the outer membrane preparations.  相似文献   

8.
In Gram-negative bacteria, many biological processes are coupled to inner membrane ion gradients. Ions transit at the interface of helices of integral membrane proteins, generating mechanical energy to drive energetic processes. To better understand how ions transit through these channels, we used a model system involved in two different processes, one of which depends on inner membrane energy. The Tol machinery of the Escherichia coli cell envelope is dedicated to maintaining outer membrane stability, a process driven by the proton-motive force. The Tol system is parasitized by bacterial toxins called colicins, which are imported through the outer membrane using an energy-independent process. Herein, we mutated TolQ and TolR transmembrane residues, and we analyzed the mutants for outer membrane stability, colicin import and protein complex formation. We identified residues involved in the assembly of the complex, and a new class of discriminative mutations that conferred outer membrane destabilization identical to a tol deletion mutant, but which remained fully sensitive to colicins. Further genetic approaches revealed transmembrane helix interactions and organization in the bilayer, and suggested that most of the discriminative residues are located in a putative aqueous ion channel. We discuss a model for the function of related bacterial molecular motors.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
Here we review the mechanisms that bacterial cells use to protect themselves against channel-forming colicins. Four mechanisms are examined: immunity, resistance, tolerance and PacB character. Immunity confers protection to colicinogenic cells against the colicin they produce, since the colicinogenic plasmid bears the genetic determinant for such immunity protein. Resistance is provided by modifications on colicin receptors located on the outer membrane. It prevents colicin adsorption and protects against those colicins sharing a common receptor. Tolerance is achieved by changes in the translocation system. The adsorbed colicin is not translocated toward the periplasmic space. This impedes its insertion into the cell membrane as well as the formation of the transmembrane channel. Tolerance confers protection against colicins that share the same translocation system. Finally, we discuss the PacB character, that confers protection against all known channel-forming colicins. The latter property is encoded by non-colicinogenic plasmids in the H-incompatibility complex.  相似文献   

11.
Escherichia coli with mutations in the exb region are impaired in outer membrane receptor-dependent uptake processes. They are resistant to the antibiotic albomycin and exhibit reduced sensitivity to group B colicins. A 2.2-kilobase-pair DNA fragment of the exb locus was sequenced. It contained two open reading frames, designated exbB and exbD, which encoded polypeptides of 244 and 141 amino acids, respectively. Both proteins were found in the cytoplasmic membrane. They showed strong homologies to the TolQ and TolR proteins, respectively, which are involved in uptake of group A colicins and infection by filamentous bacteriophages. exbB and exbD were required to complement exb mutations. Osmotic shock treatment rendered exb mutants sensitive to colicin M, which was taken as evidence that the ExbB and ExbD proteins are involved in transport processes across the outer membrane. It is concluded that the exb- and tol-dependent systems originate from a common uptake system for biopolymers.  相似文献   

12.
Quantification of group A colicin import sites.   总被引:7,自引:4,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Pore-forming colicins are soluble bacteriocins which form voltage-gated ion channels in the inner membrane of Escherichia coli. To reach their target, these colicins first bind to a receptor located on the outer membrane and then are translocated through the envelope. Colicins are subdivided into two groups according to the envelope proteins involved in their translocation: group A colicins use the Tol proteins; group B colicins use the proteins TonB, ExbB, and ExbD. We have previously shown that a double-cysteine colicin A mutant which possesses a disulfide bond in its pore-forming domain is translocated through the envelope but is unable to form a channel in the inner membrane (D. Duché, D. Baty, M. Chartier, and L. Letellier, J. Biol. Chem. 269:24820-24825, 1994). Measurements of colicin-induced K+ efflux reveal that preincubation of the cells with the double-cysteine mutant prevents binding of colicins of group A but not of group B. Moreover, we show that the mutant is still in contact with its receptor and import machinery when it interacts with the inner membrane. From these competition experiments, we conclude that each Escherichia coli cell contains approximately 400 and 1,000 colicin A receptors and translocation sites, respectively.  相似文献   

13.
Escherichia coli possesses two energy-coupled import systems through which substances of low concentration and of a size too large to permit diffusion through the porins are translocated across the outer membrane. Group B colicins, ferric siderophores and vitamin B12 are taken up via the TonB-ExbB-ExbD, group A colicins via the TolA-TolQ-TolR system. Cross-complementation between the two systems was demonstrated in that tolQ tolR mutants transformed with plasmids carrying exbB exbD became sensitive to group A colicins, and exbB exbD mutants transformed with plasmid-encoded tolQ tolR became sensitive to group B colicins. TolQ-TolR interacted through TonB, and ExbB-ExbD interacted through TolA with the outer membrane receptors and colicins. Activity of ExbB ExbD via TolA was higher in cells laciting TonB, and activity of TolQ TolR via TonB was increased when TolA was missing. The very distinct TolA and TonB proteins mediate exclusive interaction with group A and group B receptors, respectively. ExbB-TolR and ExbD-TolQ mixtures showed little if any complementation of exbB exbD and tolQ tolR mutants indicating coevolution of ExbB with ExbD and TolQ with ToIR. Sequence homology and mutual functional substitution of ExbB-ExbD and TolQ-TolR suggest the evolution of the two import systems from a single import system.  相似文献   

14.
The transfer RNase colicin D and ionophoric colicin B appropriate the outer membrane iron siderophore receptor FepA and share a common translocation requirement for the TonB pathway to cross the outer membrane. Despite the almost identical sequences of the N-terminal domains required for the translocation of colicins D and B, two spontaneous tonB mutations (Arg158Ser and Pro161Leu) completely abolished colicin D toxicity but did not affect either the sensitivity to other colicins or the FepA-dependent siderophore uptake capacity. The sensitivity to colicin D of both tonB mutants was fully restored by specific suppressor mutations in the TonB box of colicin D, at Ser18(Thr) and Met19(Ile), respectively. This demonstrates that the interaction of colicin D with TonB is critically dependent on certain residues close to position 160 in TonB and on the side chains of certain residues in the TonB box of colicin D. The effect of introducing the TonB boxes from other TonB-dependent receptors and colicins into colicins D and B was studied. The results of these and other changes in the two TonB boxes show that the role of residues at positions 18 and 19 in colicin D is strongly modulated by other nearby and/or distant residues and that the overall function of colicin D is much more dependent on the interaction with TonB involving the TonB box than is the function of colicin B.  相似文献   

15.
Pore-forming colicins are a family of protein toxins (Mr40–70kDa) produced by Escherichia coli and related bacteria. They are bactericidal by virtue of their ability to form ion channels in the inner membrane of target cells. They provide a useful means of studying questions such as toxin action, polypeptide translocation across and into membranes, voltage-gated channels and receptor function. These colicins bind to a receptor in the outer membrane before being translocated across the cell envelope with the aid of helper proteins that belong to nutrient-uptake systems and the so-called‘Tol’proteins, the function of which has not yet been properly defined. A distinct domain appears to be associated with each of three steps (receptor binding, translocation and formation of voltage-gated channels). The Tol-dependent uptake pathway is described here. The structures and interactions of TolA, B, Q and R have by now been quite clearly defined. Transmembrane α-helix interactions are required for the functional assembly of the E. coli Tol complex, which is preferentially located at contact sites between the inner and outer membranes. The number of colicin translocation sites is about 1000 per cell. The role and the involvement of the OmpF porin (with colicins A and N) have been described in a recent study on the structural and functional interactions of a colicin-resistant mutant of OmpF. The X-ray crystal structure of the channel-forming fragment of colicin A and that of the entire colicin la have provided the basis for biophysical and site-directed muta-genesis studies. Thanks to this powerful combination, it has been established that the interaction with the receptor in the outer membrane leads to a very substantial conformational change, as a result of which the N-terminal domains of colicins interact with the lumen of the OmpF pore and then with the C-terminal domain of TolA. A molten globular conformation of colicins probably constitutes the intermediate translocation/insertion competent state. Once the pore has formed, the polypeptide chain spans the whole cell envelope. Three distinct steps occur in the last stage of the process: (i) fast binding of the C-terminal domain to the outer face of the cytoplasmic membrane; (ii) a slow insertion of the polypeptide chain into the outer face of the inner membrane in the absence of Δψ and (iii) a profound reorganization of the helix association, triggered by the transmembrane potential and resulting in the formation of the colicin channel.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract The current model of TonB-dependent colicin transport through the outer membrane of Escherichia coli proposes initial binding to receptor proteins, vectorial release from the receptors and uptake into the periplasm from where the colicins, according to their action, insert into the cytoplasmic membrane or enter the cytoplasm. The uptake is energy-dependent and the TonB protein interacts with the receptors as well as with the colicins. In this paper we have studied the uptake of colicins B and Ia, both pore-forming colicins, into various tonB point mutants. Colicin Ia resistance of the tonB mutant (G186D, R204H) was consistent with a defective Cir receptor-TonB interaction while colicin Ia resistance of E. coli expressing TonB of Serratia marcescens , or TonB of E. coli carrying a C-terminal fragment of the S. marcescens TonB, seemed to be caused by an impaired colicin Ia-TonB interaction. In contrast, E. coli tonB (G174R, V178I) was sensitive to colicin Ia and resistant to colicin B unless TonB, ExbB and ExbD were overproduced which resulted in colicin B sensitivity. The differential effects of tonB mutations indicate differences in the interaction of TonB with receptors and colicins.  相似文献   

17.
Proteins in the outer membrane of gram-negative bacteria serve as general porins or as receptors for specific nutrient transport systems. Many of these proteins are also used as receptors initiating the processes of colicin or phage binding and uptake. The functional activities of several outer membrane proteins in Escherichia coli K-12 were followed after cessation or repression of their synthesis. Cessation of receptor synthesis was accomplished with a thermolabile suppressor activity acting on amber mutations in btuB (encoding the receptor for vitamin B(12), the E colicins, and phage BF23) and in fepA (encoding the receptor for ferric enterochelin and colicins B and D). After cessation of receptor synthesis, cells rapidly became insensitive to the colicins using that receptor. Treatment with spectinomycin or rifampin blocked appearance of insensitive cells and even increased susceptibility to colicin E1. Insensitivity to phage BF23 appeared only after a lag of about one division time, and the receptors remained functional for B(12) uptake throughout. Therefore, possession of receptor is insufficient for colicin sensitivity, and some interaction of receptor with subsequent uptake components is indicated. Another example of physiological alteration of colicin sensitivity is the protection against many of the tonB-dependent colicins afforded by provision of iron-supplying siderophores. The rate of acquisition of this nonspecific protection was found to be consistent with the repression of receptor synthesis, rather than through direct and immediate effects on the tonB product or other components of colicin uptake or action.  相似文献   

18.
Braun V  Patzer SI  Hantke K 《Biochimie》2002,84(5-6):365-380
Ton-dependent colicins and microcins are actively taken up into sensitive cells at the expense of energy which is provided by the proton motive force of the cytoplasmic membrane. The Ton system consisting of the proteins TonB, ExbB and ExbD is required for colicin and microcin import. Colicins as well as the outer membrane transport proteins contain proximal to the N-terminus a short sequence, called TonB box, which interacts with TonB and in which point mutants impair uptake. No TonB box is found in microcins. Colicins are composed of functional modules which during evolution have been interchanged resulting in new colicins. The modules define sites of interaction with the outer membrane transport genes, TonB, the immunity proteins, and the activity regions. Six TonB-dependent microcins with different primary structures are processed and exported by highly homologous proteins. Three of these microcins are modified in an unknown way and they have in common specificity for catecholate siderophore receptors.  相似文献   

19.
Colicins are antibiotic proteins that kill sensitive Escherichia coli cells. Their mode of action involves three steps: binding to specific receptors located in the outer membrane, translocation across this membrane, and action on their targets. A specific colicin domain can be assigned to each of these steps. Colicins have been subdivided into two groups (A and B) depending on the proteins required for them to cross the external membrane. Plasmids were constructed which led to an overproduction of the Tol proteins involved in the import of group A colicins. In vitro binding of overexpressed Tol proteins to either Tol-dependent (group A) or TonB-dependent (group B) colicins was analyzed. The Tol dependent colicins A and E1 were able to interact with TolA but the TonB dependent colicin B was not. The C-terminal region of TolA, which is necessary for colicin uptake, was also found to be necessary for colicin A and E1 binding to occur. Furthermore, only the isolated N-terminal domain of colicin A, which is involved in the translocation step, was found to bind to TolA. These results demonstrate the existence of a correlation between the ability of group A colicins to translocate and their in vitro binding to TolA protein, suggesting that these interactions might be part of the colicin import process.  相似文献   

20.
E Fischer  K Günter    V Braun 《Journal of bacteriology》1989,171(9):5127-5134
The exb locus in Escherichia coli consists of two genes, termed exbB and exbD. Exb functions are related to TonB function in that most TonB-dependent processes are enhanced by Exb. Like tonB mutants, exb mutants were resistant to colicin M and albomycin but, in contrast to tonB mutants, showed only reduced sensitivity to colicins B and D. Overexpressed tonB on the multicopy vector pACYC177 largely restored the sensitivity of exb mutants to colicins B, D, and M but only marginally increased sensitivity to albomycin. Suppression of the btuB451 mutation in the structural gene for the vitamin B12 outer membrane receptor protein by a mutation in tonB occurred only in an exb+ strain. Degradation of the unstable overproduced TonB protein was prevented by overproduced ExbB protein. The ExbB protein also stabilized the ExbD protein. Pulse-chase experiments with radiolabeled ferrichrome revealed release of ferrichrome from exbB, tonB, and fhuC mutants, showing that ferrichrome had not crossed the cytoplasmic membrane. It is concluded that the ExbB and ExbD proteins contribute to the activity of TonB and, like TonB, are involved in receptor-dependent transport processes across the outer membrane.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号