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.
Anthrax toxin consists of three different molecules: the binding component protective antigen (PA, 83 kDa), and the enzymatic components lethal factor (LF, 90 kDa) and edema factor (EF, 89 kDa). The 63 kDa C-terminal part of PA, PA63, forms heptameric channels that insert in endosomal membranes at low pH, necessary to translocate EF and LF into the cytosol of target cells. In many studies, about 30 kDa N-terminal fragments of the enzymatic components EF (254 amino acids) and LF (268 amino acids) were used to study their interaction with PA63-channels. Here, in experiments with artificial lipid bilayer membranes, EFN and LFN show block of PA63-channels in a dose, voltage and ionic strength dependent way with high affinity. However, when compared to their full-length counterparts EF and LF, they exhibit considerably lower binding affinity. Decreasing ionic strength and, in the case of EFN, increasing transmembrane voltage at the cis side of the membranes, resulted in a strong decrease of half saturation constants. Our results demonstrate similarities but also remarkable differences between the binding kinetics of both truncated and full-length effectors to the PA63-channel.  相似文献   

2.
Central to the power-stroke and Brownian-ratchet mechanisms of protein translocation is the process through which nonequilibrium fluctuations are rectified or ratcheted by the molecular motor to transport substrate proteins along a specific axis. We investigated the ratchet mechanism using anthrax toxin as a model. Anthrax toxin is a tripartite toxin comprised of the protective antigen (PA) component, a homooligomeric transmembrane translocase, which translocates two other enzyme components, lethal factor (LF) and edema factor (EF), into the cytosol of the host cell under the proton motive force (PMF). The PA-binding domains of LF and EF (LFN and EFN) possess identical folds and similar solution stabilities; however, EFN translocates ∼10–200-fold slower than LFN, depending on the electrical potential (Δψ) and chemical potential (ΔpH) compositions of the PMF. From an analysis of LFN/EFN chimera proteins, we identified two 10-residue cassettes comprised of charged sequence that were responsible for the impaired translocation kinetics of EFN. These cassettes have nonspecific electrostatic requirements: one surprisingly prefers acidic residues when driven by either a Δψ or a ΔpH; the second requires basic residues only when driven by a Δψ. Through modeling and experiment, we identified a charged surface in the PA channel responsible for charge selectivity. The charged surface latches the substrate and promotes PMF-driven transport. We propose an electrostatic ratchet in the channel, comprised of opposing rings of charged residues, enforces directionality by interacting with charged cassettes in the substrate, thereby generating forces sufficient to drive unfolding.  相似文献   

3.
The edema factor (EF) and lethal factor (LF) components of anthrax toxin require anthrax protective antigen (PA) for binding and entry into mammalian cells. After internalization by receptor-mediated endocytosis, PA facilitates the translocation of EF and LF across the membrane of an acidic intracellular compartment. To characterize the translocation process, we generated chimeric proteins composed of the PA recognition domain of LF (LFN; residues 1–255) fused to either the amino-terminus or the carboxy-terminus of the catalytic chain of diphtheria toxin (DTA). The purified fusion proteins retained ADP-ribosyltransferase activity and reacted with anti-sera against LF and diphtheria toxin. Both fusion proteins strongly inhibited protein synthesis in CHO-K1 cells in the presence of PA, but not in its absence, and they showed similar levels of activity. This activity could be inhibited by adding LF or the LFN fragment (which blocked the interaction of the fusion proteins with PA), by adding inhibitors of endo-some acidification known to block entry of EF and LF into cells, or by introducing mutations that attenuated the ADP-ribosylation activity of the DTA moiety. The results demonstrate that LFN fused to either the amino-terminus or the carboxy-terminus of a heterologous protein retains its ability to complement PA in mediating translocation of the protein to the cytoplasm. Besides its importance in understanding translocation, this finding provides the basis for constructing a translocation vector that mediates entry of a variety of heterologous proteins, which may require a free amino- or carboxy-terminus for biological activity, into the cytoplasm of mammalian cells.  相似文献   

4.
Anthrax toxins   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Bacillus anthracis, the etiological agent of anthrax, secretes three polypeptides that assemble into toxic complexes on the cell surfaces of the host it infects. One of these polypeptides, protective antigen (PA), binds to the integrin-like domains of ubiquitously expressed membrane proteins of mammalian cells. PA is then cleaved by membrane endoproteases of the furin family. Cleaved PA molecules assemble into heptamers, which can then associate with the two other secreted polypeptides: edema factor (EF) and/or lethal factor (LF). The heptamers of PA are relocalized to lipid rafts where they are quickly endocytosed and routed to an acidic compartment. The low pH triggers a conformational change in the heptamers, resulting in the formation of cation-specific channels and the translocation of EF/LF. EF is a calcium- and calmodulin-dependent adenylate cyclase that dramatically raises the intracellular concentration of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP). LF is a zinc-dependent endoprotease that cleaves the amino terminus of mitogen-activated protein kinase kinases (Meks). Cleaved Meks cannot bind to their substrates and have reduced kinase activity, resulting in alterations of the signaling pathways they govern. The structures of PA, PA heptamer, EF, and LF have been solved and much is now known about the molecular details of the intoxication mechanism. The in vivo action of the toxins, on the other hand, is still poorly understood and hotly debated. A better understanding of the toxins will help in the design of much-needed anti-toxin drugs and the development of new toxin-based medical applications.Abbreviations CMG2 Capillary morphogenesis protein 2 - DTA Diphtheria toxin A chain - EF Edema factor - EFn N-terminal fragment of EF - ETx Edema toxin - GR Glucocorticoid receptors - GSK3 Glycogen synthase kinase 3 - I domain Integrin-like domain - iNOS Inducible nitric oxide synthase - LF Lethal factor - LFn N-terminal fragment of LF - LTx Lethal toxin - MAPK Mitogen-activated protein kinase - Mek MAPK kinases - PA Protective antigen - PA20 20-kDa N-terminal fragment of PA - PA63 63-kDa C-terminal fragment of PA - TEM8 Tumor endothelial marker 8  相似文献   

5.
This work was conducted to study the microheterogeneity of mouse lactoferrin (LF). Two forms, LF1 and LF2, could be purified from uterine luminal fluid by ion-exchange HPLC on a Protein PAK SP 5PW column. Another form, LF3, was purified from the epididymis homogenate by affinity chromatography on a column of Protein A-Sepharose coupled with the purified LF2 antibody that was prepared to give no crossreaction with serum albumin. Both LF1 and LF2 showed a Mr 74 000 band while LF3 gave a Mr 70 000 band on reducing SDS–PAGE. All of them were reduced to a Mr 68 000 band after they had been digested with N-glycosidase F. The data from automated Edman degradation confirmed the completely identical 19 amino acid sequences in the N-terminal regions of these three LFs, except the lack of N-terminal Lys–Ala of LF2/LF3 in LF1. LF in tissue homogenates was immunodetected by Western blot procedure using the purified LF2 antibody. Different amounts of LF with a molecular mass of the 70 000 or 74 000 were distributed in the non-sexual organs such as kidney, spleen, lung, heart and liver and the sexual glands including epididymis, vagina, uterus, ovary and prostate. No LF was detected in stomach, intestine, testis and seminal vesicle.  相似文献   

6.
The anthrax toxin complex consists of three different molecules, protective antigen (PA), lethal factor (LF), and edema factor (EF). The activated form of PA, PA(63), forms heptamers that insert at low pH in biological membranes forming ion channels and that are necessary to translocate EF and LF in the cell cytosol. LF and EF are intracellular active enzymes that inhibit the host immune system promoting bacterial outgrowth. Here, PA(63) was reconstituted into artificial lipid bilayer membranes and formed ion-permeable channels. The heptameric PA(63) channel contains a binding site for LF on the cis side of the channel. Full-size LF was found to block the PA(63) channel in a dose- and ionic-strength-dependent way with half-saturation constants in the nanomolar concentration range. The binding curves suggest a 1:1 relationship between (PA(63))(7) and bound LF that blocks the channel. The presence of a His(6) tag at the N-terminal end of LF strongly increases the affinity of LF toward the PA(63) channel, indicating that the interaction between LF and the PA(63) channel occurs at the N terminus of the enzyme. The LF-mediated block of the PA(63)-induced membrane conductance is highly asymmetric with respect to the sign of the applied transmembrane potential. The result suggested that the PA(63) heptamers contain a high-affinity binding site for LF inside domain 1 or the channel vestibule and that the binding is ionic-strength-dependent.  相似文献   

7.
Anthrax toxin is composed of three proteins: a translocase heptameric channel, (PA(63))(7), formed from protective antigen (PA), which allows the other two proteins, lethal factor (LF) and edema factor (EF), to translocate across a host cell's endosomal membrane, disrupting cellular homeostasis. (PA(63))(7) incorporated into planar phospholipid bilayer membranes forms a channel capable of transporting LF and EF. Protein translocation through the channel can be driven by voltage on a timescale of seconds. A characteristic of the translocation of LF(N), the N-terminal 263 residues of LF, is its S-shaped kinetics. Because all of the translocation experiments reported in the literature have been performed with more than one LF(N) molecule bound to most of the channels, it is not clear whether the S-shaped kinetics are an intrinsic characteristic of translocation kinetics or are merely a consequence of the translocation in tandem of two or three LF(N)s. In this paper, we show both in macroscopic and single-channel experiments that even with only one LF(N) bound to the channel, the translocation kinetics are S shaped. As expected, the translocation rate is slower with more than one LF(N) bound. We also present a simple electrodiffusion model of translocation in which LF(N) is represented as a charged rod that moves subject to both Brownian motion and an applied electric field. The cumulative distribution of first-passage times of the rod past the end of the channel displays S-shaped kinetics with a voltage dependence in agreement with experimental data.  相似文献   

8.
Anthrax toxin consists of three ∼85-kD proteins: lethal factor (LF), edema factor (EF), and protective antigen (PA). PA63 (the 63-kD, C-terminal portion of PA) forms heptameric channels ((PA63)7) in planar phospholipid bilayer membranes that enable the translocation of LF and EF across the membrane. These mushroom-shaped channels consist of a globular cap domain and a 14-stranded β-barrel stem domain, with six anionic residues lining the interior of the stem to form rings of negative charges. (PA63)7 channels are highly cation selective, and, here, we investigate the effects on both cation selectivity and protein translocation of mutating each of these anionic residues to a serine. We find that although some of these mutations reduce cation selectivity, selectivity alone does not directly predict the rate of protein translocation; local changes in electrostatic forces must be considered as well.  相似文献   

9.
Entry of anthrax edema factor (EF) and lethal factor (LF) into the cytosol of eukaryotic cells depends on their ability to translocate across the endosomal membrane in the presence of anthrax protective antigen (PA). Here we report attributes of the N-terminal domains of EF and LF (EF(N) and LF(N), respectively) that are critical for their initial interaction with PA. We found that deletion of the first 36 residues of LF(N) had no effect on its binding to PA or its ability to be translocated. To map the binding site for PA, we used the three-dimensional structure of LF and sequence similarity between EF and LF to select positions for mutagenesis. We identified seven sites in LF(N) (Asp-182, Asp-187, Leu-188, Tyr-223, His-229, Leu-235, and Tyr-236) where mutation to Ala produced significant binding defects, with H229A and Y236A almost completely eliminating binding. Homologous mutants of EF(N) displayed nearly identical defects. Cytotoxicity assays confirmed that the LF(N) mutations impact intoxication. The seven mutation-sensitive amino acids are clustered on the surface of LF and form a small convoluted patch with both hydrophobic and hydrophilic character. We propose that this patch constitutes the recognition site for PA.  相似文献   

10.
Peptides consisting solely of D -amino acids (D -peptides) as opposed to their L -counterparts (L -peptides) are resistant towards proteolytic degradation in the organism and may therefore be useful in future efforts to develop new stable peptide-based drugs. Using the random synthetic peptide library technique several L - and D -peptides, capable of binding to both avidin and streptavidin, were found. The L -peptides contained the previously described HPQ/M motifis, and among the D -peptides three binding motifs could be identified, of which the most frequently found one contained an N-terminal aliphatic hydrophobic amino acid (V, L or I) and an aromatic amino acid (Y or F) on the second position. At the third position in this motif several different amino acid residues were found, although N was the most frequent. Peptides representing two of the D -motifs were synthesized as well as peptides containing the HPQ/M motifs, and their binding properties were examined. Although the D -peptides were originally selected using avidin they also inhibited binding between immobilized biotin and soluble streptavidin as well as avidin. The IC50 of some of the peptides were approximately 105 times higher than the IC50 for biotin but some had a lower IC50 than iminobiotin. The D -peptides, which were originally selected from the library using avidin, could also inhibit the binding between streptavidin and biotin. Likewise, L -peptides selected from a library screened with streptavidin, could inhibit the binding of both streptavidin and avidin to immobilized biotin. Furthermore, the D -peptide, VFSVQSGS, as well as biotin could inhibit binding of streptavidin to an immobilized L -peptide (RYHPQSGS). This indicates that the biotin-like structure mimicked by these two seemingly very different peptides may react with the same binding sites in the streptavidin molecule.  相似文献   

11.
Anthrax toxin consists of three different molecules: the binding component protective antigen (PA, 83 kDa), and the enzymatic components lethal factor (LF, 90 kDa) and edema factor (EF, 89 kDa). The 63 kDa C-terminal part of PA, PA(63), forms heptameric channels that insert in endosomal membranes at low pH, necessary to translocate EF and LF into the cytosol of target cells. In many studies, about 30 kDa N-terminal fragments of the enzymatic components EF (254 amino acids) and LF (268 amino acids) were used to study their interaction with PA(63)-channels. Here, in experiments with artificial lipid bilayer membranes, EF(N) and LF(N) show block of PA(63)-channels in a dose, voltage and ionic strength dependent way with high affinity. However, when compared to their full-length counterparts EF and LF, they exhibit considerably lower binding affinity. Decreasing ionic strength and, in the case of EF(N), increasing transmembrane voltage at the cis side of the membranes, resulted in a strong decrease of half saturation constants. Our results demonstrate similarities but also remarkable differences between the binding kinetics of both truncated and full-length effectors to the PA(63)-channel.  相似文献   

12.
PA-binding domain of LF (LFn) or PA-binding domain of EF (EFn) is the anthrax protective antigen (PA) binding domain of anthrax lethal factor (LF) or edema factor (EF). Here we show the development of a novel anthrax toxin inhibitor, fusion protein of N-terminal 27 amino acids deletion of LFn (Δ27LFn) and EFn. In a cell model of intoxication, fusion protein of Δ27LFn and EFn (Δ27LFn-EFn) was a 62-fold more potent toxin inhibitor than LFn or EFn, and this increased activity corresponded to a 39-fold higher PA-binding affinity by Biacore analysis. More importantly, Δ27LFn-EFn could protect the highly susceptible Fischer 344 rats from anthrax lethal toxin challenge. This work suggested that Δ27LFn-EFn has the potential as a candidate therapeutic agent against anthrax.

Structured summary

MINT-7014735, MINT-7014747, MINT-7014761: PA63 (uniprotkb:P13423) and LF (uniprotkb:P15917) bind (MI:0407) by surface plasmon resonance (MI:0107)  相似文献   

13.
Anthrax toxin complex consists of three different molecules, the binding component protective antigen (PA, 83 kDa), and the enzymatic components lethal factor (LF, 90 kDa) and edema factor (EF, 89 kDa). The 63-kDa N-terminal part of PA, PA(63), forms a heptameric channel that inserts at low pH in endosomal membranes and that is necessary to translocate EF and LF in the cytosol of the target cells. EF is an intracellular active enzyme, which is a calmodulin-dependent adenylate cyclase (89 kDa) that causes a dramatic increase of intracellular cAMP level. Here, the binding of full-length EF on heptameric PA(63) channels was studied in experiments with artificial lipid bilayer membranes. Full-length EF blocks the PA(63) channels in a dose, temperature, voltage, and ionic strength-dependent way with half-saturation constants in the nanomolar concentration range. EF only blocked the PA(63) channels when PA(63) and EF were added to the same side of the membrane, the cis side. Decreasing ionic strength and increasing transmembrane voltage at the cis side of the membranes resulted in a strong decrease of the half-saturation constant for EF binding. This result suggests that ion-ion interactions are involved in EF binding to the PA heptamer. Increasing temperature resulted in increasing half-saturation constants for EF binding to the PA(63) channels. The binding characteristics of EF to the PA(63) channels are compared with those of LF binding. The comparison exhibits similarities but also remarkable differences between the bindings of both toxins to the PA(63) channel.  相似文献   

14.
The lethal factor (LF) of Bacillus anthracis is a Zn2+-dependent metalloprotease which plays an important role in anthrax virulence. This study was aimed at identifying the histidine residues that are essential to the catalytic activities of LF. The site-directed mutagenesis was employed to replace the 10 histidine residues in domains II, III, and IV of LF with alanine residues, respectively. The cytotoxicity of these mutants was tested, and the results revealed that the alanine substitution for His-669 completely abolished toxicity to the lethal toxin (LT)-sensitive RAW264.7 cells. The reason for the toxicity loss was further explored. The zinc content of this LF mutant was the same as that of the wild type. Also this LF mutant retained its protective antigan (PA)-binding activity. Finally, the catalytic cleavage activity of this mutant was demonstrated to be drastically reduced. Thus, we conclude that residue His-669 is crucial to the proteolytic activity of LF.Anthrax is a zoonotic disease caused by toxigenic strains of the Gram-positive bacterium Bacillus anthracis (24). Because infections are highly fatal, the organisms are easily produced, and the spores spread easily, B. anthracis has been used as a bioweapon in biological war and biological terrorism (38). If inhaled, the spores are phagocytosed by alveolar macrophages, where they germinate to produce vegetative bacteria (10, 24). The vegetative bacteria further release anthrax toxins, which inhibit the innate and adaptive immune responses of the hosts. This enables the capsulated bacteria to escape the lymph node defense barrier to reach the blood system, causing bacteremia and toxemia, which can rapidly kill the hosts (24, 26). The great threat posed by anthrax to the public is not only due to the highly lethal rate of inhaled anthrax, but also is due to the social panic caused by the lethality. Therefore, efficient ways to defend against anthrax infection and spreading are greatly needed. This mostly depends on a full understanding of the mechanisms of anthrax infection and toxicities.Anthrax toxins are the dominant virulence factors of Bacillus anthracis (6, 33, 37). They consist of three proteins: protective antigen (PA; 83 kDa), lethal factor (LF; 90 kDa), and edema factor (EF; 89 kDa). The 83-kDa PA (PA83) directly binds to cellular membrane receptors and was cleaved to an active fragment of 63-kDa PA (PA63) by cellular proteases of the furin family or by serum proteases. The receptor-bound portion of PA63 self-assembles into either ring-shaped heptamers, which bind to three molecules of LF and/or EF, resulting in (PA63)7(LF/EF)3 (21), or octamers which bind up to four molecules of these moieties, resulting in (PA63)8(LF/EF)4 complexes (16, 17). The catalytic partners (EF and/or LF) are subsequently transported across the membrane to the cell cytosol (24, 27). EF is a Ca2+- and calmodulin-dependent adenylate cyclase that, together with PA, forms edema toxin. EF causes a rapid increase in intracellular cyclic AMP (cAMP) levels in host cells and alters the elaborate balance of intracellular signaling pathways (20, 23). LF is a Zn2+-dependent protease that, together with PA, forms lethal toxin (LT). It is a dominant virulence factor and the major cause of death for the B. anthracis-infected animals (1, 29, 30). LF specifically cleaves the N-terminal domain of mitogen-activated protein kinase kinases (MAPKKs) (11, 35). Because the N-terminal domain of MAPKKs is essential for the interaction between MAPKKs and MAPKs, the cleavage of this domain impairs the activation of MAPKs (8, 11, 15) and leads to the inhibition of three major cellular signaling pathways—the ERK (extracellular signal-regulated kinase), p38, and JNK (c-Jun N-terminal kinase) pathways (29, 31)—and thus induces the lysis of the host cells in an unknown mechanism.The crystal structure of LF with the N-terminal domain of MEK2 has been reported (28). LF has 776 amino acids and comprises four different domains. Domain I (residues 1 to 254) is a PA-binding domain which delivers the remaining domains of the LF to the cell cytoplasm (3). The interface among domains II, III, and IV creates long, deep, 40-Å-long catalytic grooves into which the N terminus of MEK fits and forms an active site complex (28). Domain IV is central to catalytic activities of LF, containing two zinc-binding motifs (residues 686 to 690 and residues E735 to E739) and bound to a single Zn ion (18). However, which residues of LF are critical for efficient catalytic activities and execute the substrate cleavage remains unclear.Histidine is the only naturally occurring amino acid to contain an imidazole residue as a side chain. The catalytic activity of histidine mostly depends on the special features of the imidazole residue. The logarithm of the proton dissociation constant of imidazolyl in the histidine residue is about 6.5; thus, under the physiological condition, it tends to form hydrogen bonds and shares donor and acceptor properties that can take part in either nucleophilic or base catalysis. The speed of the imidazole residue to give or accept protons is very fast, with a half-life of less than 10 s. So in the process of natural selection, histidine was chosen as the catalytic structure, indicating that it plays an important role in the catalysis process of enzymes (9, 12, 14). There are 21 histidines in LF, with 9 of them in LF domain I and 12 of them in domains II, III, and IV. The histidine residues important to LF activities in domain I have been identified (2, 22). The other 12 histidine residues in the remaining three domains include His-277, His-280, and His-424 in domain II; His-309 in domain III; and His-588, His-645, His-654, His-669, His-686, His-690, His-745, and His-749 in domain IV (28). His-686 and His-690 in domain IV were demonstrated to form a zinc binding site constituting a thermolysin-like zinc metalloprotease motif, HEXXH (18). The activities of the remaining 10 histidine residues in domains II, III, and IV have not been explored yet. In this study, we replaced these 10 histidine residues separately with alanine residues by site-directed mutagenesis. By the cytotoxicity assay of all these mutants, the H669A mutant was found to lose cell toxicity completely. Further assay revealed that residue His-669 was involved in neither zinc stabilization nor PA binding but participated in the substrate proteolytic activity of LF.  相似文献   

15.
We have devised a procedure to incorporate the anthrax protective antigen (PA) pore complexed with the N‐terminal domain of anthrax lethal factor (LFN) into lipid nanodiscs and analyzed the resulting complexes by negative‐stain electron microscopy. Insertion into nanodiscs was performed without relying on primary and secondary detergent screens. The preparations were relatively pure, and the percentage of PA pore inserted into nanodiscs on EM grids was high (~43%). Three‐dimensional analysis of negatively stained single particles revealed the LFN‐PA nanodisc complex mirroring the previous unliganded PA pore nanodisc structure, but with additional protein density consistent with multiple bound LFN molecules on the PA cap region. The assembly procedure will facilitate collection of higher resolution cryo‐EM LFN‐PA nanodisc structures and use of advanced automated particle selection methods.  相似文献   

16.
Protective antigen (PA) of anthrax toxin forms ion-conductive channels in planar lipid bilayers and liposomes under acidic pH conditions. We show here that PA has a similar permeabilizing action on the plasma membranes of CHO-K1 and three other mammalian cell lines (J774A.1, RAW264.7 and Vero). Changes in membrane permeability were evaluated by measuring the efflux of the K+ analogue, 86Rb+, from prelabelled cells, and the influx of 22Na+. The permeabilizing activity of PA was limited to a proteolytically activated form (PAN) and was dependent on acidic pH for membrane insertion (optimal at pH 5.0), but not for sustained ion flux. The flux was reduced in the presence of several known channel blockers: tetrabutyl-, tetrapentyl-, and tetrahexylammonium bromides. PAN facilitated the membrane translocation of anthrax edema factor under the same conditions that induced changes in membrane permeability to ions. These results indicate that PAN permeabilizes cellular membranes under conditions that are believed to prevail in the endosomal compartment of toxin-sensitive cells; and they provide a basis for more detailed studies of the relationship between channel formation and translocation of toxin effector moieties in vivo.  相似文献   

17.
18.
The two enzymatic components of anthrax toxin, lethal factor (LF) and edema factor (EF), are transported to the cytosol of mammalian cells by the third component, protective antigen (PA). A heptameric form of PA binds LF and/or EF and, under the acidic conditions encountered in endosomes, generates a membrane-spanning pore that is thought to serve as a passageway for these enzymes to enter the cytosol. The pore contains a 14-stranded transmembrane beta-barrel that is too narrow to accommodate a fully folded protein, necessitating that LF and EF unfold, at least partly, in order to pass. Here, we describe the pH-dependence of the unfolding of LF(N) and EF(N), the 30kDa N-terminal PA-binding domains, and minimal translocatable units, of LF and EF. Equilibrium chemical denaturation studies using fluorescence and circular dichroism spectroscopy show that each protein unfolds via a four-state mechanism: N<-->I<-->J<-->U. The acid-induced N-->I transition occurs within the pH range of the endosome (pH 5-6). The I state predominates at lower pH values, and the J and U states are populated significantly only in the presence of denaturant. The I state is compact and has characteristics of a molten globule, as shown by its retention of significant secondary structure and its ability to bind an apolar fluorophore. The N-->I transition leads to an overall 60% increase in buried surface area exposure. The J state is expanded significantly and has diminished secondary structure content. We analyze the different protonation states of LF(N) and EF(N) in terms of a linked equilibrium proton binding model and discuss the implications of our findings for the mechanism of acidic pH-induced translocation of anthrax toxin. Finally, analysis of the structure of the transmembrane beta-barrel of PA shows that it can accommodate alpha-helix, and we suggest that the steric constraints and composition of the lumen may promote alpha-helix formation.  相似文献   

19.
A novel δ-endotoxin gene was cloned from a Bacillus thuringiensis strain with activity against Locusta migratoria manilensis by PCR-based genome walking. The sequence of the cry gene was 3,432 bp long, and it encoded a Cry protein of 1,144 amino acid residues with a molecular mass of 129,196.5 kDa, which exhibited 62% homology with Cry7Ba1 in the amino acid sequence. The δ-endotoxin with five conserved sequence blocks in the amino-terminal region was designated Cry7Ca1 (GenBank accession no. EF486523). Protein structure analysis suggested that the activated toxin of Cry7Ca1 has three domains: 227 residues forming 7 α-helices (domain I); 213 residues forming three antiparallel β-sheets (domain II); and 134 residues forming a β-sandwich (domain III). The three domains, respectively, exhibited 47, 44, and 34% sequence identity with corresponding domains of known Cry toxins. SDS-PAGE and Western blot analysis showed that Cry7Ca1, encoded by the full-length open reading frame of the cry gene, the activated toxin 1, which included three domains but without the N-terminal 54 amino acid residues and the C terminus, and the activated toxin 2, which included three domains and N-terminal 54 amino acid residues but without the C terminus, could be expressed in Escherichia coli. Bioassay results indicated that the expressed proteins of Cry7Ca1 and the activated toxins (toxins 1 and 2) showed significant activity against 2nd instar locusts, and after 7 days of infection, the estimated 50% lethal concentrations (LC50s) were 8.98 μg/ml for the expressed Cry7Ca1, 0.87 μg/ml for the activated toxin 1, and 4.43 μg/ml for the activated toxin 2. The δ-endotoxin also induced histopathological changes in midgut epithelial cells of adult L. migratoria manilensis.  相似文献   

20.
Positive selection drives lactoferrin evolution in mammals   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Lactoferrin (LF) is a member of the transferrin family that is abundantly expressed and secreted by glandular epithelial cells. The biological functions of LF involve in iron homeostasis regulation of the body and antibacterial activity. Previous studies demonstrated that it had a high cationic N-terminal domain that could interact with glycosaminoglycans, lipopolysaccharides and the bacterial virulence protein. Two anti-microbial peptides, lactoferricin (LFcin) and lactoferrampin (LFampin), were also isolated and identified in N-terminal of LF. Although the antibacterial mechanism was carefully studied, little was known about the molecular evolution of LF. In this study, we estimated the nonsynonymous-to-synonymous substitution ratios ( w = dN \mathord
/ \vphantom dN dS dS \omega = {{d_{N} } \mathord{\left/ {\vphantom {{d_{N} } {d_{S} }}} \right. \kern-\nulldelimiterspace} {d_{S} }} ) per site using maximum likelihood method to analyze the LF evolution. The results of ω > 1 and five identified positive selection sites of amino acid suggested that the evolution of LF gene was characterized by positive selection. Further study found that the positive selection sites were either located in the LF-bacteria binding region or the peptides of LFcin and LFampin, indicating that the selection pressure was related to LF-bacteria interaction. The identification of these sites may contribute to the mechanism of bacteria-LF interaction.  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