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1.
Clostridium perfringens epsilon toxin (ETX) rapidly kills MDCK II cells at 37°C, but not 4°C. The current study shows that, in MDCK II cells, ETX binds and forms an oligomeric complex equally well at 37°C and 4°C but only forms a pore at 37°C. However, the complex formed in MDCK cells treated with ETX at 4°C has the potential to form an active pore, since shifting those cells to 37°C results in rapid cytotoxicity. Those results suggested that the block in pore formation at 4°C involves temperature-related trapping of ETX in a prepore intermediate on the MDCK II cell plasma membrane surface. Evidence supporting this hypothesis was obtained when the ETX complex in MDCK II cells was shown to be more susceptible to pronase degradation when formed at 4°C vs. 37°C; this result is consistent with ETX complex formed at 4°C remaining present in an exposed prepore on the membrane surface, while the ETX prepore complex formed at 37°C is unaccessible to pronase because it has inserted into the plasma membrane to form an active pore. In addition, the ETX complex rapidly dissociated from MDCK II cells at 4°C, but not 37°C; this result is consistent with the ETX complex being resistant to dissociation at 37°C because it has inserted into membranes, while the ETX prepore readily dissociates from cells at 4°C because it remains on the membrane surface. These results support the identification of a prepore stage in ETX action and suggest a revised model for ETX cytotoxicity, i) ETX binds to an unidentified receptor, ii) ETX oligomerizes into a prepore on the membrane surface, and iii) the prepore inserts into membranes, in a temperature-sensitive manner, to form an active pore.  相似文献   

2.
Perfringolysin O (PFO), a cholesterol-dependent cytolysin, forms large oligomeric pore complexes comprised of up to 50 PFO molecules. In the present studies a mutant of PFO (PFO(Y181A)) has been identified that traps PFO in a multimeric prepore complex that cannot insert its transmembrane beta-hairpins and therefore cannot form a pore. Remarkably, PFO(Y181A) can be induced to insert its transmembrane beta-hairpins if functional PFO is incorporated into the PFO(Y181A) oligomeric prepore complex. Furthermore, the transition from prepore to pore appears to be an "all or none" process; partial insertion of the transmembrane beta-barrel does not occur. Therefore, cooperative interactions between the monomers of the prepore drive the prepore to pore conversion that results in the formation of the transmembrane beta-barrel.  相似文献   

3.
Perfringolysin O (PFO), a member of the cholesterol-dependent cytolysin family of pore-forming toxins, forms large oligomeric complexes comprising up to 50 monomers. In the present study, a disulfide bridge was introduced between cysteine-substituted serine 190 of transmembrane hairpin 1 (TMH1) and cysteine-substituted glycine 57 of domain 2 of PFO. The resulting disulfide-trapped mutant (PFO(C190-C57)) was devoid of hemolytic activity and could not insert either of its transmembrane beta-hairpins (TMHs) into the membrane unless the disulfide was reduced. Both the size of the oligomer formed on the membrane and its rate of formation were unaffected by the oxidation state of the Cys(190)-Cys(57) disulfide bond; thus, the disulfide-trapped PFO was assembled into a prepore complex on the membrane. The conversion of this prepore to the pore complex was achieved by reducing the C190-C57 disulfide bond. PFO(C190-C57) that was allowed to form the prepore prior to the reduction of the disulfide exhibited a dramatic increase in the rate of PFO-dependent hemolysis and the membrane insertion of its TMHs when compared with toxin that had the disulfide reduced prior mixing the toxin with membranes. Therefore, the rate-limiting step in pore formation is prepore assembly, not TMH insertion. These data demonstrate that the prepore is a legitimate intermediate during the insertion of the large transmembrane beta-sheet of the PFO oligomer. Finally, the PFO TMHs do not appear to insert independently, but instead their insertion is coupled.  相似文献   

4.
Zhang S  Cunningham K  Collier RJ 《Biochemistry》2004,43(20):6339-6343
Heptameric anthrax protective antigen (termed prepore), which assembles at the mammalian cell surface, competitively binds edema factor (EF) and/or lethal factor (LF). It then transports them to an acidic intracellular compartment and mediates their translocation across the membrane to the cytosol. Steric constraints limit to three the number of molecules of EF and/or LF that can bind simultaneously to prepore. To determine whether the number of ligand molecules bound per heptamer affects the efficiency of translocation, we measured the low-pH-triggered translocation of the radiolabeled protective antigen (PA(63))-binding domain of LF ((35)S-LF(N)) across the plasma membrane of CHO-K1 cells as a function of the degree of saturation of the prepore. The fraction translocated remained constant at approximately 0.4 as (35)S-LF(N) was varied from nil through saturating concentrations. The same constant value was observed when we held (35)S-LF(N) at a saturating concentration and varied the number of functional ligand sites per prepore by changing the ratio of wild-type PA to a ligand-binding mutant. Thus, prepore containing only a single ligand-binding site is capable of translocating its cargo as efficiently as one containing multiple binding sites. The results as a whole imply that heptamers with one, two, or three ligands bound translocate their ligands with the same efficiency, indicating that each ligand molecule is translocated independently from the others.  相似文献   

5.
The binding of the Bacillus anthracis protective antigen (PA) to the host cell receptor is the first step toward the formation of the anthrax toxin, a tripartite set of proteins that include the enzymatic moieties edema factor (EF), and lethal factor (LF). PA is cleaved by a furin‐like protease on the cell surface followed by the formation of a donut‐shaped heptameric prepore. The prepore undergoes a major structural transition at acidic pH that results in the formation of a membrane spanning pore, an event which is dictated by interactions with the receptor and necessary for entry of EF and LF into the cell. We provide direct evidence using 1‐dimensional 13C‐edited 1H NMR that low pH induces dissociation of the Von‐Willebrand factor A domain of the receptor capillary morphogenesis protein 2 (CMG2) from the prepore, but not the monomeric full length PA. Receptor dissociation is also observed using a carbon‐13 labeled, 2‐fluorohistidine labeled CMG2, consistent with studies showing that protonation of His‐121 in CMG2 is not a mechanism for receptor release. Dissociation is likely caused by the structural transition upon formation of a pore from the prepore state rather than protonation of residues at the receptor PA or prepore interface.  相似文献   

6.
Perfringolysin O (PFO), a soluble toxin secreted by the pathogenic Clostridium perfringens, forms large homo-oligomeric pore complexes comprising up to 50 PFO molecules in cholesterol-containing membranes. In this study, electron microscopy (EM) and single-particle image analysis were used to reconstruct two-dimensional (2D) projection maps from images of oligomeric PFO prepore and pore complexes formed on cholesterol-rich lipid layers. The projection maps are characterized by an outer and an inner ring of density peaks. The outer rings of the prepore and pore complexes are very similar; however, the protein densities that make up the inner ring of the pore complex are more intense and discretely resolved than they are for the prepore complex. The change in inner-ring protein density is consistent with a mechanism in which the monomers within the prepore complex make a transition from a partially disordered state to a more ordered transmembrane beta-barrel in the pore complex. Finally, the orientation of the monomers within the oligomeric complexes was determined by visualization of streptavidin (SA) molecules bound to biotinylated cysteine-substituted residues predicted to face either the inner or outer surface of the oligomeric pore complex. This study provides an unprecedented view of the conversion of the PFO prepore to pore complex.  相似文献   

7.
The protective antigen is a key component of the anthrax toxin, as it allows entry of the enzymatic components edema factor and lethal factor into the host cell, through the formation of a membrane spanning pore. This event is absolutely critical for the pathogenesis of anthrax, and although we have yet to understand the mechanism of pore formation, recent developments have provided key insights into how this process may occur. Based on the available data, a model is proposed for the kinetic steps for protective antigen conversion from prepore to pore. In this model, the driving force for pore formation is the formation of the phi (ϕ)-clamp, a region that forms a leak-free seal around the translocating polypeptide. Formation of the ϕ-clamp elicits movements within the prepore that provide steric freedom for the subsequent conformational changes required to form the membrane spanning pore.  相似文献   

8.
Proteolytic activation of the protective antigen (PA) component of anthrax toxin allows it to self-associate into a ring-shaped homoheptamer, [PA(63)](7), which can bind the enzymatic components lethal factor (LF) and edema factor (EF). [PA(63)](7) is a pore-precursor (prepore), and under the low-pH conditions of the endosome, it forms a transmembrane pore that allows LF and EF to enter the cytosol. PA was labeled with donor and acceptor fluorescent dyes, and F?rster resonance energy transfer was used to measure the assembly and disassembly kinetics of the prepore complex in solution. The dissociation rate constant for [PA(63)](7) was 1 x 10(-)(6) s(-)(1) (t(1/2) approximately 7 days). In contrast, a ternary complex containing the PA-binding domain of LF (LF(N)) bound to a PA(63) dimer composed of two nonoligomerizing mutants dissociated rapidly (t(1/2) approximately 1 min). Thus, the substantial decrease in the rate of disassembly of [PA(63)](7) relative to the ternary complex is due to the cooperative interactions among neighboring subunits in the heptameric ring. Low concentrations of LF(N) promoted assembly of the prepore from proteolytically activated PA, whereas high concentrations inhibited assembly of both the prepore and the ternary complex. A self-assembly scheme of anthrax toxin complexes is proposed.  相似文献   

9.
Protective antigen (PA), the receptor-binding component of anthrax toxin, heptamerizes and inserts into the endosomal membrane at acidic pH, forming a pore that mediates translocation of the enzymic components of the toxin to the cytosol. When the heptameric pre-insertion form of PA (the prepore) is acidified in solution, it rapidly loses the ability to insert into membranes. To maximize insertion into model membranes, we examined two ways to bind the protein to large unilamellar vesicles (LUV). One involved attaching a His tag to the von Willebrand factor A domain of one of the PA receptors, ANTXR2, and using this protein as a bridge to bind PA to LUV containing a nickel-chelating lipid. The other involved using a His tag fused to the C terminus of PA to bind the protein directly to LUV containing the same lipid. Both ways enhanced pore formation at pH 5.0 strongly and about equally, as measured by the release of K+. Controls showed that pore formation in this system faithfully reproduced that in vivo. We also showed that binding unmodified ANTXR2 von Willebrand factor A to the prepore in solution enhanced its pore forming activity by slowing its inactivation at acidic pH. These findings indicate that an important role of PA receptors is to promote partitioning of PA into the bilayer by maintaining the prepore close to the target membrane and presumably in the optimal orientation as it undergoes the acidic pH-dependent conformational transition to the pore.  相似文献   

10.
Membrane electroporation is the method to directly transfer bioactive substances such as drugs and genes into living cells, as well as preceding electrofusion. Although much information on the microscopic mechanism has been obtained both from experiment and simulation, the existence and nature of possible intermediates is still unclear. To elucidate intermediates of electropore formation by direct comparison with measured prepore formation kinetics, we have carried out 49 atomistic electroporation simulations on a palmitoyl-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine bilayer for electric field strengths between 0.04 and 0.7 V/nm. A statistical theory is developed to facilitate direct comparison of experimental (macroscopic) prepore formation kinetics with the (single event) preporation times derived from the simulations, which also allows us to extract an effective number of lipids involved in each pore formation event. A linear dependency of the activation energy for prepore formation on the applied field is seen, with quantitative agreement between experiment and simulation. The distribution of preporation times suggests a four-state pore formation model. The model involves a first intermediate characterized by a differential tilt of the polar lipid headgroups on both leaflets, and a second intermediate (prepore), where a polar chain across the bilayer is formed by 3-4 lipid headgroups and several water molecules, thereby providing a microscopic explanation for the polarizable volume derived previously from the measured kinetics. An average pore radius of 0.47 ± 0.15 nm is seen, in favorable agreement with conductance measurements and electrooptical experiments of lipid vesicles.  相似文献   

11.
Cytolysin A (ClyA) is an α-pore forming toxin from pathogenic Escherichia coli (E. coli) and Salmonella enterica. Here, we report that E. coli ClyA assembles into an oligomeric structure in solution in the absence of either bilayer membranes or detergents at physiological temperature. These oligomers can rearrange to create transmembrane pores when in contact with detergents or biological membranes. Intrinsic fluorescence measurements revealed that oligomers adopted an intermediate state found during the transition between monomer and transmembrane pore. These results indicate that the water-soluble oligomer represents a prepore intermediate state. Furthermore, we show that ClyA does not form transmembrane pores on E. coli lipid membranes. Because ClyA is delivered to the target host cell in an oligomeric conformation within outer membrane vesicles (OMVs), our findings suggest ClyA forms a prepore oligomeric structure independently of the lipid membrane within the OMV. The proposed model for ClyA represents a non-classical pathway to attack eukaryotic host cells.  相似文献   

12.
Cholesterol-dependent cytolysins are a family of poreforming proteins that have been shown to be virulence factors for a large number of pathogenic bacteria. The mechanism of pore formation for these toxins involves a complex series of events that are known to include binding, oligomerization, and insertion of a transmembrane beta-barrel. Several features of this mechanism remain poorly understood and controversial. Whereas a prepore mechanism has been proposed for perfringolysin O, a very different mechanism has been proposed for the homologous member of the family, streptolysin O. To distinguish between the two models, a novel approach that directly measures the dimension of transmembranes pores was used. Pore formation itself was examined for both cytolysins by encapsulating fluorescein-labeled peptides and proteins of different sizes into liposomes. When these liposomes were re-suspended in a solution containing anti-fluorescein antibodies, toxin-mediated pore formation was monitored directly by the quenching of fluorescein emission as the encapsulated molecules were released, and the dyes were bound by the antibodies. The analysis of pore formation determined using this approach reveals that only large pores are produced by perfringolysin O and streptolysin O during insertion (and not small pores that grow in size). These results are consistent only with the formation of a prepore complex intermediate prior to insertion of the transmembrane beta-barrel into the bilayer. Fluorescence quenching experiments also revealed that PFO in the prepore complex contacts the membrane via domain 4, and that the individual transmembrane beta-hairpins in domain 3 are not exposed to the nonpolar core of the bilayer at this intermediate stage.  相似文献   

13.
Proteolytic activation of receptor-bound protective antigen (PA) at the cell surface removes PA20, allowing PA63 to oligomerize and form a ring-shaped heptameric prepore. The prepore binds edema factor (EF) and lethal factor (LF) and, after endocytosis and trafficking of the complex to an acidic, vesicular compartment, it undergoes membrane insertion and mediates translocation of EF/LF to the cytosol. Data from membrane conductance experiments support a model of membrane insertion in which the 2β2–2β3 loop of PA, which is disordered in native PA and the prepore, forms a 14-stranded transmembrane β-barrel. Recent studies on the process of prepore-to-pore conversion and our current understanding of the mechanism of pH-dependent translocation will be described.  相似文献   

14.
Cholesterol Dependent Cytolysins (CDCs) are important bacterial virulence factors that form large (200–300 Å) membrane embedded pores in target cells. Currently, insights from X-ray crystallography, biophysical and single particle cryo-Electron Microscopy (cryo-EM) experiments suggest that soluble monomers first interact with the membrane surface via a C-terminal Immunoglobulin-like domain (Ig; Domain 4). Membrane bound oligomers then assemble into a prepore oligomeric form, following which the prepore assembly collapses towards the membrane surface, with concomitant release and insertion of the membrane spanning subunits. During this rearrangement it is proposed that Domain 2, a region comprising three β-strands that links the pore forming region (Domains 1 and 3) and the Ig domain, must undergo a significant yet currently undetermined, conformational change. Here we address this problem through a systematic molecular modeling and structural bioinformatics approach. Our work shows that simple rigid body rotations may account for the observed collapse of the prepore towards the membrane surface. Support for this idea comes from analysis of published cryo-EM maps of the pneumolysin pore, available crystal structures and molecular dynamics simulations. The latter data in particular reveal that Domains 1, 2 and 4 are able to undergo significant rotational movements with respect to each other. Together, our data provide new and testable insights into the mechanism of pore formation by CDCs.  相似文献   

15.
Actinoporin equinatoxin II (EqtII) is an archetypal example of α-helical pore-forming toxins that porate cellular membranes by the use of α-helices. Previous studies proposed several steps in the pore formation: binding of monomeric protein onto the membrane, followed by oligomerization and insertion of the N-terminal α-helix into the lipid bilayer. We studied these separate steps with an EqtII triple cysteine mutant. The mutant was engineered to monitor the insertion of the N terminus into the lipid bilayer by labeling Cys-18 with a fluorescence probe and at the same time to control the flexibility of the N-terminal region by the disulfide bond formed between cysteines introduced at positions 8 and 69. The insertion of the N terminus into the membrane proceeded shortly after the toxin binding and was followed by oligomerization. The oxidized, non-lytic, form of the mutant was still able to bind to membranes and oligomerize at the same level as the wild-type or the reduced form. However, the kinetics of the N-terminal helix insertion, the release of calcein from erythrocyte ghosts, and hemolysis of erythrocytes was much slower when membrane-bound oxidized mutant was reduced by the addition of the reductant. Results show that the N-terminal region needs to be inserted in the lipid membrane before the oligomerization into the final pore and imply that there is no need for a stable prepore formation. This is different from β-pore-forming toxins that often form β-barrel pores via a stable prepore complex.  相似文献   

16.
Staphylococcal LukF and Hlg2 are water-soluble monomers of gamma-haemolysin that assemble into oligomeric pores on the erythrocyte membranes. Here, we have created double-cysteine LukF mutants, in which single disulphide bonds connect either the prestem domain and the cap domain (V12C-T136C, Cap-Stem), or two beta-strands within the prestem domain (T117C-T136C, Stem-Stem) to control pore assembly of gamma-haemolysin at intermediate stages. The disulphide-trapped mutants were inactive in erythrocyte lysis, but gained full haemolytic activity if the disulphide bonds were reduced. The disulphide bonds blocked neither the membrane binding ability nor the intermediate prepore oligomerization, but efficiently inhibited the transition from prepores to pores. The prepores of Cap-Stem were dissociated into monomers in 1% SDS. In contrast, the prepores of Stem-Stem were stable in SDS and had ring-shaped structures similar to those of wild-type LukF, as observed by transmission electron microscopy. The transition of both mutants from prepores to pores could even be achieved by reducing disulphide bonds at low temperature (2 degrees C), whereas prepore oligomerization was effectively inhibited by low temperature. Finally, real-time transition of Stem-Stem from prepores to pores on ghost cells, visualized using a Ca2+-sensitive fluorescent indicator (Rhod2), was shown by the sequential appearance of fluorescence spots, indicating pore-opening events. Taken together, these data indicate that the prepores are legitimate intermediates during gamma-haemolysin pore assembly, and that conformational changes around residues 117 and 136 of the prestem domain are essential for pore formation, but not for membrane binding or prepore oligomerization. We propose a mechanism for gamma-haemolysin pore assembly based on the demonstrated intermediates.  相似文献   

17.
Smedley JG  Sharp JS  Kuhn JF  Tomer KB 《Biochemistry》2008,47(40):10694-10704
The protective antigen (PA) component of the anthrax toxin (ATx) plays an essential role in the pathogenesis of the bioterrorism bacterium Bacillus anthracis. After oligomerization on the cell surface and docking of lethal factor and/or edema factor, PA is internalized and undergoes a conformational change when exposed to the low pH of the endosome to form a membrane-penetrating pore. While the structure of the PA prepore has been determined, precise structural information regarding the pore state remains lacking. Oxidative protein footprinting (OPF) can provide dynamic structural information about a protein complex through analysis of amino acid oxidation both before and after a conformational change. In this study, PA at pH 7.5 and 5.5 was exposed to hydroxyl radicals generated by ionizing radiation. Mass spectrometry was then used to both identify and quantitate the extent of oxidation of differentially modified residues. Several residues were found to be more readily oxidized at pH 7.5, most of which clustered toward the bottom plane of the prepore heptamer. Two amino acids had greater oxidation rates at pH 5.5, both found on the outer periphery of the prepore. When the OPF results were mapped to a current computational model of the pore, the accessibilities of some residues were consistent with their modeled positions in the pore (i.e., Y688 and V619/I620), while data for other residues (W346 and M350) appeared to conflict with the model. The results from this study illustrate the utility of OPF in generating empirical structural information for yet undetermined structures and offering opportunities for refinement for models thereof.  相似文献   

18.
Staphylococcal alpha-hemolysin (alphaHL) is a beta barrel pore-forming toxin that is secreted by the bacterium as a water-soluble monomeric protein. Upon binding to susceptible cells, alphaHL assembles via an inactive prepore to form a water-filled homoheptameric transmembrane pore. The N terminus of alphaHL, which in the crystal structure of the fully assembled pore forms a latch between adjacent subunits, has been thought to play a vital role in the prepore to pore conversion. For example, the deletion of two N-terminal residues produced a completely inactive protein that was arrested in assembly at the prepore stage. In the present study, we have re-examined assembly with a comprehensive set of truncation mutants. Surprisingly, we found that after truncation of up to 17 amino acids, the ability of alphaHL to form functional pores was diminished, but still substantial. We then discovered that the mutation Ser(217) --> Asn, which was present in our original set of truncations but not in the new ones, promotes complete inactivation upon truncation of the N terminus. Therefore, the N terminus of alphaHL cannot be critical for the prepore to pore transformation as previously thought. Residue 217 is involved in the assembly process and must interact indirectly with the distant N terminus during the last step in pore formation. In addition, we provide evidence that an intact N terminus prevents the premature oligomerization of alphaHL monomers in solution.  相似文献   

19.
Protective antigen (PA), a key component of anthrax toxin, mediates the entry of lethal factor (LF) or edema factor (EF) through a membranal pore into target cells. We have previously reported the isolation and chimerization of cAb29, an anti-PA monoclonal antibody that effectively neutralizes anthrax toxin in an unknown mechanism. The aim of this study was to elucidate the neutralizing mechanism of this antibody in vitro and to test its ability to confer post-exposure protection against anthrax in vivo. By systematic evaluation of the steps taking place during the PA-based intoxication process, we found that cAb29 did not interfere with the initial steps of intoxication, namely its ability to bind to the anthrax receptor, the consecutive proteolytic cleavage to PA63, oligomerization, prepore formation, or LF binding. However, the binding of cAb29 to the prepore prevented its pH-triggered transition to the transmembranal pore, thus preventing the last step of intoxication, i.e. the translocation of LF/EF into the cell. Epitope mapping, using a phage display peptide library, revealed that cAb29 binds the 2α1 loop in domain 2 of PA, a loop that undergoes major conformational changes during pore formation. In vivo, we found that 100% of anthrax-infected rabbits survived when treated with cAb29 12 h after exposure. In conclusion, these experiments demonstrate that cAb29 exerts its potent neutralizing activity in a unique manner by blocking the prepore-to-pore conversion process.  相似文献   

20.
Perfringolysin O (PFO) is a member of the cholesterol-dependent cytolysin (CDC) family of membrane-penetrating toxins. The CDCs form large homooligomers (estimated to be comprised of up to 50 CDC monomers) that are responsible for generating a large pore in cholesterol-containing membranes of eukaryotic cells. The assembly of the PFO cytolytic complex was examined to determine whether it forms an oligomeric prepore complex on the membrane prior to the insertion of its membrane-spanning beta-sheet. A PFO oligomeric complex was formed on liposomes at both 4 degrees C and 37 degrees C and shown by SDS-agarose gel electrophoresis to be comprised of a large, comparatively homogeneous complex instead of a distribution of oligomer sizes. At low temperature, the processes of oligomerization and membrane insertion could be resolved, and PFO was found to form an oligomer without significant membrane insertion of its beta-hairpins. Furthermore, PFO was found to increase the ion conductivity through a planar bilayer by large and discrete stepwise changes in conductance that are consistent with the insertion of a preassembled pore complex into the bilayer. The combined results of these analyses strongly support the hypothesis that PFO forms a large oligomeric prepore complex on the membrane surface prior to the insertion of its transmembrane beta-sheet.  相似文献   

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