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1.
The passage by the low endosomal pH is believed to be an essential step of the diphtheria toxin (DT) intoxication process in vivo. Several studies have suggested that this low pH triggers the insertion of DT into the membrane. We demonstrate here that its insertion into large unilamellar vesicles (LUV) is accompanied by a strong destabilization of the vesicles at low pH. The destabilization has been studied by following the release of a fluorescent dye (calcein) encapsulated in the liposomes. The influence of the lipid composition upon this process has been examined. At a given pH, the calcein release is always faster for a negatively charged (asolectin) than for a zwitterionic (egg PC) system. Moreover, the transition pH, which is the pH at which the toxin-induced release becomes significant, is shifted upward for the asolectin LUV as compared to the egg PC LUV. No calcein release is observed for rigid phospholipid vesicles (DPPC and DPPC/DPPA 9/1 mol/mol) below their transition temperature whereas DT induces an important release of the dye in the temperature range corresponding to the phase transition. The transition pH associated to the calcein release from egg PC vesicles is identical with that corresponding to the exposure of the DT hydrophobic domains, as revealed here by the binding of a hydrophobic probe (ANS) to the toxin. This suggests the involvement of these domains in the destabilization process. Both A and B fragments destabilize asolectin and PC vesicles in a pH-dependent manner but to a lesser extent than the entire toxin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Staphylococcal alpha-toxin forms heptameric pores on eukaryotic cells. After binding to the cell membrane in its monomeric form, the toxin first assembles into a heptameric pre-pore. Subsequently, the pre-pore transforms into the final pore by membrane insertion of an amphipathic beta-barrel, which comprises the "central loop" domains of all heptamer subunits. The process of membrane insertion was analyzed here using a set of functionally altered toxin mutants. The results show that insertion may be initiated within an individual protomer when its NH2 terminus activates its central loop. The activated state is then shared with the central loops of the residual heptamer subunits, which results in cooperative membrane penetration. This cooperation of the central loops commences while these are still remote from the lipid bilayer. Nevertheless, it is subject to modulation by the target membrane, which therefore acts across a distance much like an allosteric effector. However, while allosteric transitions usually are reversible, membrane insertion of alpha-toxin is an irreversible event, and we show here that it can proceed to completion in a domino-like fashion when triggered by as little as a single foreign atom within the entire heptamer.  相似文献   

3.
Hydrophobic photoactivable reagents, which readily partition into membranes, have proved very useful for studying membrane hydrophobic core. These reagents have been linked to fatty acids in order to obtain amphipathic photoactivable reagents which label membranes more effectively. By varying the length of these amphipathic reagents, an attempt to label membrane hydrophobic core at different depths can be made. We report here 9-diazofluorene-2-butyric acid as a new photoactivable reagent which labels the single bilayer vesicles prepared from egg phosphatidylcholine. The labelling site on the fatty acyl chains could be traced to be between the carbon atom 4 and 6. The new probe thus labels the membrane at a site which is proximal to what can be predicted from its length and transverse location in membranes.  相似文献   

4.
By use of carboxyfluorescein-loaded multilamellar liposomes prepared from synthetic phosphatidylcholine (PC) or sphingomyelin and cholesterol in a molar ratio of 1:1, we studied whether or not fatty acyl domain of the phospholipids affects the membrane-damaging action (or channel formation) of Staphylococcus aureus alpha-toxin on the phospholipid-cholesterol membranes. Our data indicated: (1) that toxin-induced carboxyfluorescein-leakage from the liposomes composed of saturated fatty acyl residue-carrying PC and cholesterol was decreased with increasing chain length of the acyl residues between 12 and 18 carbon atoms, although toxin-binding to the liposomes was not significantly affected by the length of fatty acyl residue; (2) that unsaturated fatty acyl residue in PC or sphingomyelin molecule conferred higher sensitivity to alpha-toxin on the phospholipid-cholesterol liposomes, compared with saturated fatty acyl residues; and (3) that hexamerization of alpha-toxin, estimated by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, occurred more efficiently on the liposomes composed of PC with shorter fatty acyl chain or unsaturated fatty acyl chain. Thus, hydrophobic domain of the phospholipids influences membrane-channel formation of alpha-toxin in the phospholipid-cholesterol membrane, perhaps by modulating packing of phospholipid, cholesterol and the toxin in membrane.  相似文献   

5.
When the liposome membrane is exposed to the alpha-toxin of Staphylococcus aureus, fluorescence of the tryptophan residue(s) of the toxin molecule increases concomitantly with the degree of toxin-hexamer formation (Ikigai, H., and Nakae, T. (1985) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 130, 175-181). In the present study, the toxin-membrane interaction was distinguished from the hexamer formation by the fluorescence energy transfer from the tryptophan residue(s) of the toxin molecule to the dansylated phosphatidylethanolamine in phosphatidylcholine liposome. Measurement of these two parameters yielded the following results. The effect of the toxin concentration and phospholipid concentration on these two parameters showed first order kinetics. The effect of liposome size on the energy transfer and the fluorescence increment of the tryptophan residue(s) was only detectable in small liposomes. Under moderately acidic or basic conditions, the fluorescence energy transfer always preceded the fluorescence increment of the tryptophan residue(s). The fluorescence increment at 336 nm at temperatures below 20 degrees C showed a latent period, whereas the fluorescence energy transfer did not. These results were thought to indicate that when alpha-toxin damages the target membrane, the molecule interacts with the membrane first, and then undergoes oligomerization within the membrane.  相似文献   

6.
Intrinsic membrane proteins of rabbit red blood cells were labeled with the photoreactive amphipatic reagent 12-(4-azido-2-nitrophenoxy) stearoyl (1-14C) glucosamine, which inserts into the hydrophobic membrane region and generates a reactive nitrene upon ultraviolet irradiation. Photolabeling of membrane-bound staphylococcal alpha-toxin after lysis of probe-treated rabbit red blood cells by this toxin implies its penetration into the hydrophobic region of the outer leaflet of the membrane. In contrast clostridial theta-toxin and staphylococcal delta-toxin were not labeled, but extraction of intrinsic membrane proteins by delta-toxin was evidenced.  相似文献   

7.
Comparison of hemolytic activity and chromate-releasing activity of partially purified preparations of staphylococcal alpha-toxin indicated the presence of a lytic factor other than alpha-toxin. This lytic release factor (RF) was isolated from the preparations and was shown to be active against both lipid spherules and erythrocytes. Heat-purified alpha-toxin (HP alpha-toxin) disrupted spherules, with the formation of fragments which always showed the presence of ring structures similar in dimensions (ca. 90 A) to pure alpha 12S-toxin. The interaction of HP alpha-toxin with spherules was accompanied by loss of hemolytic activity and adsorption of toxic protein. The alpha 12S-toxin, although only weakly hemolytic, was shown to be lytic for spherules. An alpha 12S-free toxin rapidly disrupted spherules, with formation of fragments with attached rings similar in dimensions to the alpha 12S molecule. Lipid monolayer experiments showed that HP alpha-toxin could penetrate lipid monolayers by virtue of a hydrophobic interaction. Effects of HP alpha-toxin on rabbit and human erythrocyte ghosts were similar to its effects on spherules, in that rings appeared on membrane fragments. Toxin-lysed rabbit erythrocytes showed similar rings on the resulting membrane fragments. However, rings were not seen on toxin-treated rabbit erythrocytes in the prelytic lag phase; this result and the fact that human erythrocytes are largely insensitive to alpha-toxin were interpreted as evidence against a lytic mechanism involving ring formation as the primary event. Rings were interpreted as toxin polymers similar to alpha 12S molecules, formed from specifically orientated active toxin molecules at the surface of lipid structures. Possible mechanisms for toxin lysis of spherules and erythrocytes are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
By use of multilamellar phosphatidylcholine (PC) liposomes of different acyl composition and cholesterol content as model membranes, we studied whether or not membrane fluidity affects the assembly process of Staphylococcus aureus alpha-toxin. Under conditions using fluid and solid membranes, we assayed accessibility (or hemolytic activity) of liposome-bound alpha-toxin to rabbit erythrocytes added, hexamerization of membrane-bound toxin using sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) under nondenaturating conditions, and susceptibility of liposome-bound toxin to trypsin digestion. Our data indicated 1) that alpha-toxin bound to PC membrane as a hemolytically active monomer (or reversibly bound state); 2) that when the membrane was fluidized either by phase transition of PC or by inclusion of cholesterol over 20 mol %, the hemolytically active monomer of the toxin was irreversibly converted to nonhemolytic monomer (and/or unstable oligomer) in a first-order kinetics with a t1/2 of about 1 min, and thereafter hexamerization of the toxin gradually proceeded in the following 60-90 min; 3) that alpha-toxin might have different topology and/or conformation in PC membrane, depending on the presence or absence of cholesterol in the PC membrane; and 4) that coexistence of unsaturated acyl chain-carrying PC and cholesterol was a prerequisite for efficient hexamerization of alpha-toxin in membrane. Thus, increase in membrane fluidity promoted the assembly process of S. aureus alpha-toxin.  相似文献   

9.
The bifunctional Bordetella adenylate cyclase toxin-hemolysin (ACT) penetrates target cell membranes, forms cation-selective channels and subverts cellular signaling by catalyzing uncontrolled conversion of ATP to cAMP. While primarily targeting phagocytes expressing the alphaMbeta2 integrin (CD11b/CD18), the toxin can also penetrate mammalian erythrocytes lacking the receptor and membrane endocytosis. We sought here to analyze the membrane interactions of ACT in a liposome model. Insertion of ACT into liposome membranes required calcium and caused leakage of entrapped fluorescent probes due to liposome disruption, as indicated by similar release kinetics for the approximately 398 Da FITC probe and its approximately 4400 Da dextran conjugate. However, the non-acylated proACT, which does not penetrate cellular membranes, exhibited higher capacity to bind and lyze liposomes than the mature toxin, showing that the fatty-acyl modification was not required for penetration of ACT into the lipid bilayer. Individual deletions within the channel-forming, acylation and repeat domains of ACT abolished its capacity to disrupt both liposomes and erythrocytes. In contrast to erythrocyte binding, however, the liposome binding was only lost upon a simultaneous deletion of both the channel-forming and acylation domains, suggesting that the acylation domain was also involved in liposome penetration of ACT. Moreover, substitutions of glutamates 509 and 516 by lysines, which strongly enhanced the channel-forming and hemolytic activity of ACT, did not affect its capacity to disrupt liposomes. This shows that the mechanism of ACT action in cellular membranes is not fully reproduced in liposome membranes.  相似文献   

10.
The relative weight of electrostatic interactions and hydrophobic forces in the process of membrane disruption caused by E. coliα-haemolysin (HlyA) has been studied with a purified protein preparation and a model system consisting of large unilamellar vesicles loaded with water-soluble fluorescent probes. Vesicles were prepared in buffers of different ionic strengths, or pHs, and the net surface charge of the bilayers was also modified by addition of negatively (e.g., phosphatidylinositol) or positively (e.g., stearylamine) charged lipids. The results can be interpreted in terms of a multiple equilibrium in which α-haemolysin may exist: aggregated HlyA ⇄ monomeric HlyA ⇄ membrane-bound HlyA. In these equilibria both electrostatic and hydrophobic forces are significant. Electrostatic forces become substantial under certain circumstances, e.g., membrane binding when bilayer and protein have opposite electric charges. Protein adsorption to the bilayer is more sensitive to electrostatic forces than membrane disruption itself. In the latter case, the irreversible nature of protein insertion may overcome electrostatic repulsions. Also of interest is the complex effect of pH on the degree of aggregation of an amphipathic toxin like α-haemolysin, since pH changes are not only influencing the net protein charge but may also be inducing protein conformational transitions shown by changes in the protein intrinsic fluorescence and in its susceptibility to protease digestion, that appear to regulate the presence of hydrophobic patches at the surface of the molecule, thus modifying the ability of the toxin to either aggregate or become inserted in membranes. Received: 29 October 1996/Revised: 4 February 1997  相似文献   

11.
Diphtheria toxin (DT) is a disulfide linked AB-toxin consisting of a catalytic domain (C), a membrane-inserting domain (T), and a receptor-binding domain (R). It gains entry into cells by receptor-mediated endocytosis. The low pH ( approximately 5.5) inside the endosomes induces a conformational change in the toxin leading to insertion of the toxin in the membrane and subsequent translocation of the C domain into the cell, where it inactivates protein synthesis ultimately leading to cell death. We have used a highly reactive hydrophobic photoactivable reagent, DAF, to identify the segments of DT that interact with the membrane at pH 5.2. This reagent readily partitions into membranes and, on photolysis, indiscriminately inserts into lipids and membrane-inserted domains of proteins. Subsequent chemical and/or enzymatic fragmentation followed by peptide sequencing allows for identification of the modified residues. Using this approach it was observed that T domain helices, TH1, TH8, and TH9 insert into the membrane. Furthermore, the disulfide link was found on the trans side leaving part of the C domain on the trans side. This domain then comes out to the cis side via a highly hydrophobic patch corresponding to residues 134-141, originally corresponding to a beta-strand in the solution structure of DT. It appears that the three helices of the T domain could participate in the formation of a channel from a DT-oligomer, thus providing the transport route to the C domain after the disulfide reductase separates the two chains.  相似文献   

12.
Lipid vesicles have been utilized to study the interactions of diphtheria toxin (DT) with membranes. The assay for DT ion channel formation was fluorescence-detected membrane potential depolarization of vesicles in which valinomycin-induced potassium diffusion gradients had been generated. The following requirements for ion channel formation have been identified: (1) acid pH (less than 5); (2) trans-negative membrane potentials (35-fold increase in channel-forming activity from -6 mV to -59 mV); and (3) negatively charged phospholipid headgroups (about 100-fold more activity using vesicles formed from asolectin compared to soybean phosphatidylcholine). Concentration dependence plots of toxin activity showed a linear response with logarithmic slopes of nearly one for each lipid composition. These results show a close parallel to those obtained previously with planar lipid bilayers and thus provide guidelines for conditions which facilitate functional insertion of the toxin into vesicles.  相似文献   

13.
Cholesterol (Chol) in phosphatidylcholine large unilamellar vesicles (PC LUV) modulated interaction of the bilayers with a class A amphipathic peptide, Ac-18A-NH2: Chol increased the peptide binding capacity and reduced the affinity together with the peptide-induced leakage of calcein from LUV. Similar effects of Chol have been observed on the interaction of LUV with apoA-I [Saito, H., Miyako, Y., Handa, T., and Miyajima, K. (1997) J. Lipid Res. 38, 287-294]. Circular dichroism (CD) spectra of the peptide indicated a similar helical structure formation in LUV with and without Chol. The fluorescence spectral shift, quantum yield, anisotropy, and acrylamide-quenching of the peptide Trp indicated that in PC:Chol (3:2) LUV, Ac-18A-NH2 was located in a more polar membrane environment with increased motional freedom and greater accessibility to the aqueous medium. Fluorescence energy transfer from the Trp indole ring to acceptors situated at different depths in the bilayers revealed that the amphipathic peptide penetrated the hydrophobic interior of PC bilayers, while the peptide was located at the polar zwitterionic surface in PC:Chol LUV. The inclusion of Chol causes the headgroup separation of PC at the surface of LUV and increases the binding maximum of the wedge-shaped amphipathic peptide without disrupting the membrane structure. In addition, the rigidifying effect of Chol on PC acyl chains prevents the penetration of the peptide into the bilayer interior. These findings imply that Chol in membranes affects the binding and motional freedom of exchangeable plasma apolipoproteins containing class A amphipathic sequences, e.g., apoA-I and apoCs.  相似文献   

14.
In the direct cell membrane penetration, arginine-rich cell-penetrating peptides are thought to penetrate into cells across the hydrophobic lipid membranes. To investigate the effect of the amphipathic property of arginine-rich peptide on the cell-penetrating ability, we designed a novel amphipathic cell-penetrating peptide, A2-17, and its derivative, A2-17KR, in which all lysine residues are substituted with arginine residues, based on the glycosaminoglycan binding region in the N-terminal α-helix bundle of human apolipoprotein E. Isothermal titration calorimetry showed that A2-17 variants have a strong ability to bind to heparin with high affinity. Circular dichroism and tryptophan fluorescence measurements demonstrated that A2-17 variants bind to lipid vesicles with a structural change from random coil to amphipathic α-helix, being inserted into the hydrophobic membrane interiors. Flow cytometric analysis and confocal laser scanning microscopy demonstrated the great cell penetration efficiency of A2-17 variants into CHO-K1 cells when incubated at low peptide concentrations (2 μM or less), suggesting that the increased amphipathicity with α-helix formation enhances the cell membrane penetration ability of arginine-rich peptides. Interestingly, A2-17KR exhibited lower efficiency of cell membrane penetration compared to A2-17 despite of their similar binding affinity to lipid membranes. Since high peptide concentrations (typically >10 μM) are usually prerequisite for efficient cell penetration of arginine-rich peptides, A2-17 is a unique amphipathic cell-penetrating peptide that exhibits an efficient cell penetration ability even at low peptide concentrations.  相似文献   

15.
Lipid monolayers of different compositions were used to study the interaction of tetanus toxin with membrane lipids and to evaluate the role of polysialoglycosphingolipids as membrane receptors. At neutral pH, the toxin binds to dioleoylglycerophosphocholine monolayers and inserts into the phospholipid layer. This effect is potentiated by acidic phospholipids without an apparent preference for a single class of phospholipids. Polysialoglycosphingolipids further increase the fixation and penetration of tetanus toxin in lipid monolayers, but no specific requirement for a particular ganglioside was identified. The ganglioside effect is abolished in the presence of other nervous tissue lipids: cerebrosides and glycosphingolipid sulfates are partially responsible for this effect. The penetration of tetanus toxin in the lipid monolayer is pH dependent. It increases with lowering pH, it is facilitated by acidic phospholipids and by glycosphingolipid sulfates and it is mediated both by hydrophobic and electrostatic interactions as deduced from an analysis of the effect of ionic strength. Fragment B of tetanus toxin the low-pH-driven lipid interaction of the toxin. On the basis of the present findings, the possible role of polysialoglycosphingolipids in the neurospecific binding of tetanus toxin is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Model membranes have been used to study the interaction between diphtheria toxin and lipids. We report here on the ability of this toxin to induc% at low pH, fusion and aggregation of asolectin lipid vesicles. Resonance energy transfer experiments using lipid fluorescent probes make it possible to discriminate between these two processes.  相似文献   

17.
J X Jiang  F S Abrams  E London 《Biochemistry》1991,30(16):3857-3864
Diphtheria toxin membrane penetration is triggered by the low pH within the endosome lumen. Subsequent exposure to the neutral pH of the cytoplasm is believed to aid in translocation of the catalytic A domain of the toxin into the cytoplasm. To understand the effects of low pH and subsequent exposure to neutral pH on translocation, we studied toxin conformation in solution and in toxin inserted in model membranes. Two conformations were found at low pH. One form, L', predominates below 25-30 degrees C, and the other, L", predominates above 25-30 degrees C and is formed from the L' state by an unfolding event. Both forms are hydrophobic and penetrate deeply into membranes. After pH neutralization, the L' and L' conformations give rise to two new conformations, R' and R', respectively. The R' and R" conformations differ from each other in that in the R' state the A domain remains folded, whereas in the R" state the A domain is unfolded. This is confirmed by the finding that only the R' state possesses the capacity to bind and hydrolyze NAD+. It is also supported by the finding that the R' state can also be formed by thermal unfolding of the R' state. The R conformations differ from the low-pH L conformations in that although they remain largely membrane-inserted, it appears that a large portion of the toxin is no longer in contact with the hydrophobic core of the bilayer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Proton translocation is important in membrane-mediated processes such as ATP-dependent proton pumps, ATP synthesis, bacteriorhodopsin, and cytochrome oxidase function. The fundamental mechanism, however, is poorly understood. To test the theoretical possibility that bundles of hydrophobic alpha-helices could provide a low energy pathway for ion translocation through the lipid bilayer, polyamino acids were incorporated into extruded liposomes and planar lipid membranes, and proton translocation was measured. Liposomes with incorporated long-chain poly-L-alanine or poly-L-leucine were found to have proton permeability coefficients 5 to 7 times greater than control liposomes, whereas short-chain polyamino acids had relatively little effect. Potassium permeability was not increased markedly by any of the polyamino acids tested. Analytical thin layer chromatography measurements of lipid content and a fluorescamine assay for amino acids showed that there were approximately 135 polyleucine or 65 polyalanine molecules associated with each liposome. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy indicated that a major fraction of the long-chain hydrophobic peptides existed in an alpha-helical conformation. Single-channel recording in both 0.1 N HCl and 0.1 M KCl was also used to determine whether proton-conducting channels formed in planar lipid membranes (phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylethanolamine, 1:1). Poly-L-leucine and poly-L-alanine in HCl caused a 10- to 30-fold increase in frequency of conductive events compared to that seen in KCl or by the other polyamino acids in either solution. This finding correlates well with the liposome observations in which these two polyamino acids caused the largest increase in membrane proton permeability but had little effect on potassium permeability. Poly-L-leucine was considerably more conductive than poly-L-alanine due primarily to larger event amplitudes and, to a lesser extent, a higher event frequency. Poly-L-leucine caused two populations of conductive events, one in the 0.1-0.5 pA range, and one in the 1.0-5.0 pA range, whereas nearly all events caused by poly-L-alanine were in the 0.1-0.5 pA range at an applied voltage of +60 mV. The channel-like activity appeared to switch between conductive and nonconductive states, with most open-times in the range of 50-200 ms. We conclude that hydrophobic polyamino acids produce proton-conducting defects in lipid bilayers that may be used to model functional proton channels in biological membranes.  相似文献   

19.
Staphylococcal alpha-toxin at subcytotoxic concentrations stimulated phosphatidylinositol turnover and arachidonic acid release in undifferentiated cultures of pheochromocytoma PC12 cells. Stimulation of phospholipase A2 but not C was dependent on extracellular calcium. Addition of staphylococcal alpha-toxin to PC12 cells caused a dose-dependent, biphasic increase in intracellular calcium measured by fura-2 fluorescence technique. Elevation of intracellular Ca2+ content occurred with a time course similar to those observed for stimulation of phospholipase A2. Alteration of membrane structure and formation of staphylococcal alpha-toxin pores facilitating an influx of Ca2+, represent the probable mechanisms by which phospholipases C and A2 are activated, respectively. These results suggest a possible involvement of Ca2+, phosphoinositides and arachidonic acid metabolites in the pathogenic action of staphylococcus alpha-toxin and caution against the general usage of this toxin as a permeabilizing agent to study stimulus-secretion coupling in secretory cells.  相似文献   

20.
Photoreactive phospholipids have been used to probe the lipid interaction of diphtheria toxin. Low pH values induce the membrane insertion of both the binding and enzymic fragments of the toxin. The efficiency of this process is much higher with asolectin than with egg lecithin (phosphatidylcholine)/cholesterol liposomes. The low-pH-induced interaction of the toxin fragments with the membrane hydrocarbon phase is more evident for the enzymic A-chain than for the binding B-chain, and it is fully reversed by returning the pH to neutrality.  相似文献   

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