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 62 毫秒
1.
Extensive engineering of protein nanopores for biotechnological applications using native scaffolds requires further inspection of their internal geometry and size. Recently, we redesigned ferric hydroxamate uptake component A (FhuA), a 22-β-stranded protein containing an N-terminal 160-residue cork domain (C). The cork domain and four large extracellular loops (4L) were deleted to obtain an unusually stiff engineered FhuA ΔC/Δ4L nanopore. We employed water-soluble poly(ethylene glycols) and dextran polymers to examine the interior of FhuA ΔC/Δ4L. When this nanopore was reconstituted into a synthetic planar lipid bilayer, addition of poly(ethylene glycols) produced modifications in the single-channel conductance, allowing for the evaluation of the nanopore diameter. Here, we report that FhuA ΔC/Δ4L features an approximate conical internal geometry with the cis entrance smaller than the trans entrance, in accord with the asymmetric nature of the crystal structure of the wild-type FhuA protein. Further experiments with impermeable dextran polymers indicated an average internal diameter of ∼2.4 nm, a conclusion we arrived at based upon the polymer-induced alteration of the access resistance contribution to the nanopore’s total resistance. Molecular insights inferred from this work represent a platform for future protein engineering of FhuA that will be employed for specific tasks in biotechnological applications.  相似文献   

2.
The translocation of polymers through pores has been examined for almost two decades with an emphasis on nucleic acids. There are also interesting circumstances in biology where polypeptides and polysaccharides pass through transmembrane pores, and our laboratory has been investigating examples of them. Single-molecule nucleic acid sequencing by nanopore technology is an emerging approach for ultrarapid genomics. Strand sequencing with engineered protein nanopores is a viable technology which has required advances in four areas: nucleic acid threading, nucleobase identification, controlled strand translocation, and nanopore arrays (Bayley, 2012). The latter remain a pressing need and our attempts to improve arrays will be described. In several physiological situations, folded proteins pass through transmembrane pores. We have developed a model system comprising mutant thioredoxins as the translocated proteins, and staphylococcal alpha-hemolysin, as the pore. Our findings support a mechanism in which there is local unfolding near the terminus of the polypeptide that enters the pore. The remainder of the protein then unfolds spontaneously and diffuses through the pore into the recipient compartment (Rodriguez-Larrea & Bayley, 2013). We have also examined the pore formed by the E. coli outer membrane protein Wza, which transports capsular polysaccharide from its site of synthesis to the outside of the cell. We made mutant open forms of the pore and screened blockers for them by electrical recording in planar bilayers. The most effective blocker binds in the alpha-helix barrel of Wza, a site accessible from the external medium, and therefore, a prospective target for antibiotics (Kong et al., 2013).  相似文献   

3.
The FhuA protein in the outer membrane of Escherichia coli actively transports ferrichrome and the antibiotics albomycin and rifamycin CGP 4832 and serves as a receptor for the phages T1, T5, and phi80 and for colicin M and microcin J25. The crystal structure reveals a beta-barrel with a globular domain, the cork, which closes the channel formed by the barrel. Genetic deletion of the cork resulted in a beta-barrel that displays no FhuA activity. A functional FhuA was obtained by cosynthesis of separately encoded cork and the beta-barrel domain, each endowed with a signal sequence, which showed that complementation occurs after secretion of the fragments across the cytoplasmic membrane. Inactive complete mutant FhuA and an FhuA fragment containing 357 N-proximal amino acid residues complemented the separately synthesized wild-type beta-barrel to form an active FhuA. Previous claims that the beta-barrel is functional as transporter and receptor resulted from complementation by inactive complete FhuA and the 357-residue fragment. No complementation was observed between the wild-type cork and complete but inactive FhuA carrying cork mutations that excluded the exchange of cork domains. The data indicate that active FhuA is reconstituted extracytoplasmically by insertion of separately synthesized cork or cork from complete FhuA into the beta-barrel, and they suggest that in wild-type FhuA the beta-barrel is formed prior to the insertion of the cork.  相似文献   

4.
The crystal structure of Escherichia coli FhuA reveals a beta-barrel domain that is closed by a globular cork domain. It has been assumed that the proton motive force of the cytoplasmic membrane through the interaction of the TonB protein with the TonB box of the cork opens the FhuA channel. Yet, deletion of the cork results in an FhuA derivative, FhuADelta5-160, that still displays TonB-dependent substrate transport and phage receptor activity. To investigate this unexpected finding further, we constructed FhuADelta5-160 derivatives of FhuA proteins from Salmonella paratyphi B, Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, and Pantoea agglomerans. The FhuADelta5-160 proteins inserted correctly into the outer membrane, and with the exception of the P. agglomerans protein, transported ferrichrome and albomycin. FhuA hybrids consisting of the beta-barrel of one strain and the cork of another strain were active and showed higher TonB-dependent ferrichrome transport rates than the corkless derivatives. Exceptions were the E. coli beta-barrel/Salmonella serovar Typhimurium cork hybrid protein and the Salmonella serovar Typhimurium beta-barrel/P. agglomerans cork hybrid protein, both of which were less active than the beta-barrels alone. Each of the FhuA mutant proteins displayed activity for each of their ligands, except for phage T5, only when coupled to TonB. The hybrid FhuA proteins displayed a similar activity with the E. coli TonB protein as with their cognate TonB proteins. Sensitivity to phages T1, T5, and phi80, rifamycin CGP 4832, and colicin M was determined by the beta-barrel, whereas sensitivity to phage ES18 and microcin J25 required both the beta-barrel and cork domains. These results demonstrate that the beta-barrel domain of FhuA confers activity and specificity and responds to TonB and that the cork domains of various FhuA proteins can be interchanged and contribute to the activities of the FhuA hybrids.  相似文献   

5.
FhuA (MM 78.9 kDa) is an Escherichia coli outer membrane protein that transports iron coupled to ferrichrome and is the receptor for a number of bacteriophages and protein antibiotics. Its three-dimensional structure consists of a 22-stranded beta-barrel lodged in the membrane, extracellular hydrophilic loops, and a globular domain (the "cork") located within the beta-barrel and occluding it. This unexpected structure raises questions about the connectivity of the different domains and their respective roles in the different functions of the protein. To address these questions, we have compared the properties of the wild-type receptor to those of a mutated FhuA (FhuA Delta) missing a large part of the cork. Differential scanning calorimetry experiments on wild-type FhuA indicated that the cork and the beta-barrel behave as autonomous domains that unfold at 65 and 75 degrees C, respectively. Ferrichrome had a strong stabilizing effect on the loops and cork since it shifted the first transition to 71.4 degrees C. Removal of the cork destabilized the protein since a unique transition at 61.6 degrees C was observed even in the presence of ferrichrome. FhuA Delta showed an increased sensitivity to proteolysis and to denaturant agents and an impairment in phage T5 and ferrichrome binding.  相似文献   

6.
The redesign of biological nanopores is focused on bacterial outer membrane proteins and pore-forming toxins, because their robust β-barrel structure makes them the best choice for developing stochastic biosensing elements. Using membrane protein engineering and single-channel electrical recordings, we explored the ferric hydroxamate uptake component A (FhuA), a monomeric 22-stranded β-barrel protein from the outer membrane of Escherichia coli. FhuA has a luminal cross-section of 3.1 × 4.4 nm and is filled by a globular N-terminal cork domain. Various redesigned FhuA proteins were investigated, including single, double, and multiple deletions of the large extracellular loops and the cork domain. We identified four large extracellular loops that partially occlude the lumen when the cork domain is removed. The newly engineered protein, FhuAΔC/Δ4L, was the result of a removal of almost one-third of the total number of amino acids of the wild-type FhuA (WT-FhuA) protein. This extensive protein engineering encompassed the entire cork domain and four extracellular loops. Remarkably, FhuAΔC/Δ4L forms a functional open pore in planar lipid bilayers, with a measured unitary conductance of ~4.8 nanosiemens, which is much greater than the values recorded previously with other engineered FhuA protein channels. There are numerous advantages and prospects of using such an engineered outer membrane protein not only in fundamental studies of membrane protein folding and design, and the mechanisms of ion conductance and gating, but also in more applicative areas of stochastic single-molecule sensing of proteins and nucleic acids.  相似文献   

7.
The interaction of spin-labeled lipids with beta-barrel transmembrane proteins has been studied by the electron spin resonance (ESR) methods developed for alpha-helical integral proteins. The outer membrane protein OmpA and the ferrichrome-iron receptor FhuA from the outer membrane of Escherichia coli were reconstituted in bilayers of dimyristoylphosphatidylglycerol. The ESR spectra from phosphatidylglycerol spin labeled on the 14-C atom of the sn-2 chain contain a second component from motionally restricted lipids contacting the intramembranous surface of the beta-barrel, in addition to that from the fluid bilayer lipids. The stoichiometry of motionally restricted lipids, 11 and 32 lipids/monomer for OmpA and FhuA, respectively, is constant irrespective of the total lipid/protein ratio. It is proportional to the number of transmembrane beta-strands, eight for OmpA and 22 for FhuA, and correlates reasonably well with the intramembranous perimeter of the protein. Spin-labeled lipids with different polar headgroups display a differential selectivity of interaction with the two proteins. The more pronounced pattern of lipid selectivity for FhuA than for OmpA correlates with the preponderance of positively charged residues facing the lipids in the extensions of the beta-sheet and shorter interconnecting loops on the extracellular side of FhuA.  相似文献   

8.
A set of 49 protein nanopore-lipid bilayer systems was explored by means of coarse-grained molecular-dynamics simulations to study the interactions between nanopores and the lipid bilayers in which they are embedded. The seven nanopore species investigated represent the two main structural classes of membrane proteins (α-helical and β-barrel), and the seven different bilayer systems range in thickness from ∼28 to ∼43 Å. The study focuses on the local effects of hydrophobic mismatch between the nanopore and the lipid bilayer. The effects of nanopore insertion on lipid bilayer thickness, the dependence between hydrophobic thickness and the observed nanopore tilt angle, and the local distribution of lipid types around a nanopore in mixed-lipid bilayers are all analyzed. Different behavior for nanopores of similar hydrophobic length but different geometry is observed. The local lipid bilayer perturbation caused by the inserted nanopores suggests possible mechanisms for both lipid bilayer-induced protein sorting and protein-induced lipid sorting. A correlation between smaller lipid bilayer thickness (larger hydrophobic mismatch) and larger nanopore tilt angle is observed and, in the case of larger hydrophobic mismatches, the simulated tilt angle distribution seems to broaden. Furthermore, both nanopore size and key residue types (e.g., tryptophan) seem to influence the level of protein tilt, emphasizing the reciprocal nature of nanopore-lipid bilayer interactions.  相似文献   

9.
The ferric siderophore transporters of the Gram-negative bacterial outer membrane manifest a unique architecture: Their N termini fold into a globular domain that lodges within, and physically obstructs, a transmembrane porin beta-barrel formed by their C termini. We exchanged and deleted the N termini of two such siderophore receptors, FepA and FhuA, which recognize and transport ferric enterobactin and ferrichrome, respectively. The resultant chimeric proteins and empty beta-barrels avidly bound appropriate ligands, including iron complexes, protein toxins, and viruses. Thus, the ability to recognize and discriminate these molecules fully originates in the transmembrane beta-barrel domain. Both the hybrid and the deletion proteins also transported the ferric siderophore that they bound. The FepA constructs showed less transport activity than wild type receptor protein, but the FhuA constructs functioned with turnover numbers that were equivalent to wild type. The mutant proteins displayed the full range of transport functionalities, despite their aberrant or missing N termini, confirming (Braun, M., Killmann, H., and Braun, V. (1999) Mol. Microbiol. 33, 1037-1049) that the globular domain within the pore is dispensable to the siderophore internalization reaction, and when present, acts without specificity during solute uptake. These and other data suggest a transport process in which siderophore receptors undergo multiple conformational states that ultimately expel the N terminus from the channel concomitant with solute internalization.  相似文献   

10.
FhuA in the outer membrane of Escherichia coli serves as a transporter for ferrichrome, the antibiotics albomycin and rifamycin CGP4832, colicin M, and as receptor for phages T1, T5 and phi80. The previously determined crystal structure reveals that residues 160-714 of the mature protein form a beta-barrel that is closed from the periplasmic side by the globular N-proximal fragment, residues 1-159, designated the cork. In this study, deletion of the cork resulted in a stable protein, FhuADelta5-160, that was incorporated in the outer membrane. Cells that synthesized FhuADelta5-160 displayed a higher sensitivity to large antibiotics such as erythromycin, rifamycin, bacitracin and vancomycin, and grew on maltotetraose and maltopentaose in the absence of LamB. Higher concentrations of ferrichrome supported growth of a tonB mutant that synthesized FhuADelta5-160. These results demonstrate non-specific diffusion of compounds across the outer membrane of cells that synthesize FhuADelta5-160. However, growth of a FhuADelta5-160 tonB wild-type strain occurred at low ferrichrome concentrations, and ferrichrome was transported at about 45% of the FhuA wild-type rate despite the lack of ferrichrome binding sites provided by the cork. FhuADelta5-160 conferred sensitivity to the phages and colicin M at levels similar to that of wild-type FhuA, and to albomycin and rifamycin CGP 4832. The activity of FhuADelta5-160 depended on TonB, although the mutant lacks the TonB box (residues 7-11) previously implicated in the interaction of FhuA with TonB. CCCP inhibited tonB-dependent transport of ferrichrome through FhuADelta5-160. FhuADelta5-160 still functions as a specific transporter, and sites in addition to the TonB box are involved in the TonB-mediated response of FhuA to the proton gradient of the cytoplasmic membrane. It is proposed that TonB interacts with the TonB box of FhuA and with the beta-barrel to release ferrichrome from the FhuA binding sites and to open the channel in FhuA. For transport of ferrichrome through the open channel of FhuADelta5-160, interaction of TonB with the beta-barrel is sufficient to release ferrichrome from the residual binding sites at the beta-barrel and to induce the active conformation of the L4 loop at the cell surface for infection by the TonB-dependent phages T1 and phi80.  相似文献   

11.
Electroporation of a single cell in a microchannel was studied. The effects of electrical (e.g., strength of the electric pulse) and geometrical (e.g., microchannel height, electrode size and position) parameters on cell membrane permeabilization were investigated. The electrodes were assumed to be embedded in the walls of the microchannel; the cell was suspended between these two electrodes. By keeping the electric pulse constant, increasing the microchannel height reduces the number and the radius of the biggest nanopores, as well as the electroporated area of the cell membrane. If the width of the electrodes is bigger than the cell diameter, the transmembrane potential will be centralized and have a sinusoidal distribution around the cell if nanopores are not generated. As the width of the electrode decreases and becomes smaller than the cell diameter, the local transmembrane potential decreases; in the nonelectroporative area, the transmembrane potential distribution deviates from the sinusoidal behavior; the induced transmembrane potential also concentrates around the poles of the cell membrane (the nearest points of the cell membrane to the electrodes). During cell membrane permeabilization, the biggest nanopores are initially created at the poles and then the nanopore population expands toward the equator. The number of the created nanopores reaches its maximal value within a few microseconds; further presence of the electric pulse may not influence the number and location of the created nanopores anymore but will develop the generated nanopores. Strengthening the electric pulse intensifies the size and number of the created nanopores as well as the electroporated area on the cell membrane.  相似文献   

12.
Solid-state nanopores have emerged as a versatile tool for the characterization of single biomolecules such as nucleic acids and proteins1. However, the creation of a nanopore in a thin insulating membrane remains challenging. Fabrication methods involving specialized focused electron beam systems can produce well-defined nanopores, but yield of reliable and low-noise nanopores in commercially available membranes remains low2,3 and size control is nontrivial4,5. Here, the application of high electric fields to fine-tune the size of the nanopore while ensuring optimal low-noise performance is demonstrated. These short pulses of high electric field are used to produce a pristine electrical signal and allow for enlarging of nanopores with subnanometer precision upon prolonged exposure. This method is performed in situ in an aqueous environment using standard laboratory equipment, improving the yield and reproducibility of solid-state nanopore fabrication.  相似文献   

13.
The FhuA outer membrane protein of Escherichia coli actively transports ferrichrome, albomycin, and rifamycin CGP 4832, and confers sensitivity to microcin J25, colicin M, and the phages T1, T5, and phi80. Guided by the FhuA crystal structure and derived predictions on how FhuA might function, mutants were isolated in the cork domain (residues 1 to 160) and in the beta-barrel domain (residues 161 to 714). Deletion of the TonB box (residues 7 to 11) completely inactivated all TonB-dependent functions of FhuA. Fixation of the cork to turn 7 of the barrel through a disulfide bridge between introduced C27 and C533 residues abolished ferrichrome transport, which was restored by reduction of the disulfide bond. Deletion of residues 24 to 31, including the switch helix (residues 24 to 29), which upon binding of ferrichrome to FhuA undergoes a large structural transition (17 A) and exposes the N terminus of FhuA (TonB box) to the periplasm, reduced FhuA transport activity (79% of the wild-type activity) but conferred full sensitivity to colicin M and the phages. Duplication of residues 23 to 30 or deletion of residues 13 to 20 resulted in FhuA derivatives with properties similar to those of FhuA with a deletion of residues 24 to 31. However, a frameshift mutation that changed QSEA at positions 18 to 21 to KKAP abolished almost completely most of FhuA's activities. The conserved residues R93 and R133 among energy-coupled outer membrane transporters are thought to fix the cork to the beta-barrel by forming salt bridges to the conserved residues E522 and E571 of the beta-barrel. Proteins with the E522R and E571R mutations were inactive, but inactivity was not caused by repulsion of R93 by R522 and R571 and of R133 by R571. Point mutations in the cork at sites that move or do not move upon the binding of ferrichrome had no effect or conferred only slightly reduced activities. It is concluded that the TonB box is essential for FhuA activity. The TonB box region has to be flexible, but its distance from the cork domain can greatly vary. The removal of salt bridges between the cork and the barrel affects the structure but not the function of FhuA.  相似文献   

14.
OmpG is an intermediate size, monomeric, outer membrane protein from Escherichia coli, with n beta = 14 beta-strands. It has a large pore that is amenable to modification by protein engineering. The stoichiometry ( N b = 20) and selectivity ( K r = 0.7-1.2) of lipid-protein interaction with OmpG incorporated in dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine bilayer membranes was determined with various 14-position spin-labeled lipids by using EPR spectroscopy. The limited selectivity for different lipid species is consistent with the disposition of charged residues in the protein. The conformation and orientation (beta-strand tilt and beta-barrel order parameters) of OmpG in disaturated phosphatidylcholines of odd and even chain lengths from C(12:0) to C(17:0) was determined from polarized infrared spectroscopy of the amide I and amide II bands. A discontinuity in the protein orientation (deduced from the beta-barrel order parameters) is observed at the point of hydrophobic matching of the protein with lipid chain length. Compared with smaller (OmpA; n beta = 8) and larger (FhuA; n beta = 22) monomeric E. coli outer membrane proteins, the stoichiometry of motionally restricted lipids increases linearly with the number of beta-strands, the tilt (beta approximately 44 degrees ) of the beta-strands is comparable for the three proteins, and the order parameter of the beta-barrel increases regularly with n beta. These systematic features of the integration of monomeric beta-barrel proteins in lipid membranes could be useful for characterizing outer membrane proteins of unknown structure.  相似文献   

15.
Infection of Escherichia coli K-12 by phages T1 and phi 80 requires the FhuA outer membrane protein and the TonB protein. Mutations in the N-terminal globular domain close to the predicted channel in the beta-barrel of FhuA were created. The FhuA Delta 107-111 N104K K110D L111P mutant and the FhuA(L(109)DPNGLK(110)) insertion mutant were sensitive to phage T1, but nearly resistant to phage phi 80. FhuA Delta 107-111 N104K K110D L111P mediated phage T1 infection in a tonB mutant without formation of TonB-independent phage T1 host-range mutants. The FhuA mutants showed no altered sensitivity to phage T5. Although the phages share overlapping binding sites in FhuA, the structural alterations elicited by the mutations resulted in very different phage sensitivities. In the FhuA deletion mutant, the TonB requirement for phage T1 infection was partially bypassed.  相似文献   

16.
FhuA belongs to a family of specific siderophore transport systems located in the outer membrane of Escherichia coli. The energy required for the transport process is provided by the proton motive force of the cytoplasmic membrane and is transmitted to FhuA by the protein TonB. Although the structure of full-length TonB is not known, the structure of the last 77 residues of a fragment composed of the 86 C-terminal amino acids was recently solved and shows an intertwined dimer (Chang, C., Mooser, A., Pluckthun, A., and Wlodawer, A. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 27535-27540). We analyzed the ability of truncated C-terminal TonB fragments of different lengths (77, 86, 96, 106, 116, and 126 amino acid residues, respectively) to bind to the receptor FhuA. Only the shortest TonB fragment, TonB-77, could not effectively interact with FhuA. We have also observed that the fragments TonB-77 and TonB-86 form homodimers in solution, whereas the longer fragments remain monomeric. TonB fragments that bind to FhuA in vitro also inhibit ferrichrome uptake via FhuA in vivo and protect cells against attack by bacteriophage Phi80.  相似文献   

17.
Solid-state nanopores have been used to perform measurements at the single-molecule level to examine the local structure and flexibility of nucleic acids 1-6, the unfolding of proteins 7, and binding affinity of different ligands 8. By coupling these nanopores to the resistive-pulse technique 9-12, such measurements can be done under a wide variety of conditions and without the need for labeling 3. In the resistive-pulse technique, an ionic salt solution is introduced on both sides of the nanopore. Therefore, ions are driven from one side of the chamber to the other by an applied transmembrane potential, resulting in a steady current. The partitioning of an analyte into the nanopore causes a well-defined deflection in this current, which can be analyzed to extract single-molecule information. Using this technique, the adsorption of single proteins to the nanopore walls can be monitored under a wide range of conditions 13. Protein adsorption is growing in importance, because as microfluidic devices shrink in size, the interaction of these systems with single proteins becomes a concern. This protocol describes a rapid assay for protein binding to nitride films, which can readily be extended to other thin films amenable to nanopore drilling, or to functionalized nitride surfaces. A variety of proteins may be explored under a wide range of solutions and denaturing conditions. Additionally, this protocol may be used to explore more basic problems using nanopore spectroscopy.  相似文献   

18.
Previous reports on Poisson-Nernst-Planck (PNP) simulations of solid-state nanopores have focused on steady state behaviour under simplified boundary conditions. These are Neumann boundary conditions for the voltage at the pore walls, and in some cases also Donnan equilibrium boundary conditions for concentrations and voltages at both entrances of the nanopore. In this paper, we report time-dependent and steady state PNP simulations under less restrictive boundary conditions, including Neumann boundary conditions applied throughout the membrane relatively far away from the nanopore. We simulated ion currents through cylindrical and conical nanopores with several surface charge configurations, studying the spatial and temporal dependence of the currents contributed by each ion species. This revealed that, due to slow co-diffusion of oppositely charged ions, steady state is generally not reached in simulations or in practice. Furthermore, it is shown that ion concentration polarization is responsible for the observed limiting conductances and ion current rectification in nanopores with asymmetric surface charges or shapes. Hence, after more than a decade of collective research attempting to understand the nature of ion current rectification in solid-state nanopores, a relatively intuitive model is retrieved. Moreover, we measured and simulated current-voltage characteristics of rectifying silicon nitride nanopores presenting overlimiting conductances. The similarity between measurement and simulation shows that overlimiting conductances can result from the increased conductance of the electric double-layer at the membrane surface at the depletion side due to voltage-induced polarization charges. The MATLAB source code of the simulation software is available via the website http://micr.vub.ac.be.  相似文献   

19.
DNA sequencing using nanopores has already been achieved and commercialized; the next step in advancing nanopore technology is towards protein sequencing. Although trials have been reported for discriminating the 20 amino acids using biological nanopores and short peptide carriers, it remains challenging. The size compatibility between nanopores and peptides is one of the issues to be addressed. Therefore, exploring biological nanopores that are suitable for peptide sensing is key in achieving amino acid sequence determination. Here, we focus on EXP2, the transmembrane protein of a translocon from malaria parasites, and describe its pore-forming properties in the lipid bilayer. EXP2 mainly formed a nanopore with a diameter of 2.5 nm assembled from 7 monomers. Using the EXP2 nanopore allowed us to detect poly-L-lysine (PLL) at a single-molecule level. Furthermore, the EXP2 nanopore has sufficient resolution to distinguish the difference in molecular weight between two individual PLL, long PLL (Mw: 30,000–70,000) and short PLL (Mw: 10,000). Our results contribute to the accumulation of information for peptide-detectable nanopores.  相似文献   

20.
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