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1.
Alanine substitution mutations in the Cry1Ac domain III region, from amino acid residues 503 to 525, were constructed to study the functional role of domain III in the toxicity and receptor binding of the protein to Lymantria dispar, Manduca sexta, and Heliothis virescens. Five sets of alanine block mutants were generated at the residues (503)SS(504), (506)NNI(508), (509)QNR(511), (522)ST(523), and (524)ST(525). Single alanine substitutions were made at the residues (509)Q, (510)N, (511)R, and (513)Y. All mutant proteins produced stable toxic fragments as judged by trypsin digestion, midgut enzyme digestion, and circular dichroism spectrum analysis. The mutations, (503)SS(504)-AA, (506)NNI(508)-AAA, (522)ST(523)-AA, (524)ST(525)-AA, and (510)N-A affected neither the protein's toxicity nor its binding to brush border membrane vesicles (BBMV) prepared from these insects. Toward L. dispar and M. sexta, the (509)QNR(511)-AAA, (509)Q-A, (511)R-A, and (513)Y-A mutant toxins showed 4- to 10-fold reductions in binding affinities to BBMV, with 2- to 3-fold reductions in toxicity. Toward H. virescens, the (509)QNR(511)-AAA, (509)Q-A, (511)R-A, and (513)Y-mutant toxins showed 8- to 22-fold reductions in binding affinities, but only (509)QNR(511)-AAA and (511)R-A mutant toxins reduced toxicity by approximately three to four times. In the present study, greater loss in binding affinity relative to toxicity has been observed. These data suggest that the residues (509)Q, (511)R, and (513)Y in domain III might be only involved in initial binding to the receptor and that the initial binding step becomes rate limiting only when it is reduced more than fivefold.  相似文献   

2.
We have evaluated the binding of Bacillus thuringiensis Cry toxins to aminopeptidase N (APN) purified from Lymantria dispar (gypsy moth) brush border membrane vesicle (BBMV). CryIAc toxin bound strongly to APN, while either the structurally related CryIAa and CryIAb toxins or CryIC, CryIIA, and CryIIIA toxins showed weak binding to APN. An in vitro competition binding study demonstrated that the binding of CryIAc to L. dispar BBMV was inhibited by APN. Inhibition of short circuit current for CryIAc, measured by voltage clamping of whole L. dispar midgut, was substantially reduced by addition of phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C, which is known to release APN from the midgut membrane. In contrast, addition of phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C had only a marginal effect on the inhibition of short circuit current for CryIAa. These data suggest that APN is the major functional receptor for CryIAc in L. dispar BBMV. A ligand blotting experiment demonstrated that CryIAc recognized a 120-kDa peptide (APN), while CryIAa and CryIAb recognized a 210-kDa molecule in L. dispar BBMV. In contrast, CryIAa and CryIAb bound to both the 120- and 210-kDa molecules in Manduca sexta BBMV, while CryIAc recognized only the 120-kDa peptide. The 120-kDa peptide (APN) in L. dispar BBMV reacted with soybean agglutinin, indicating that N-acetylgalactosamine is a component of this glycoprotein.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Specificity for target insects of Bacillus thuringiensis insecticidal Cry toxins is largely determined by toxin affinity for insect midgut receptors. The mode of binding for one such toxin-receptor complex was investigated by extensive toxin mutagenesis, followed by real-time receptor binding analysis using an optical biosensor (BIAcore). Wild-type Cry1Ac, a three-domain, lepidopteran-specific toxin, bound purified gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar) aminopeptidase N (APN) biphasically. Site 1 displayed fast association and dissociation kinetics, while site 2 possessed slower kinetics, yet tighter affinity. We empirically determined that two Cry1Ac surface regions are involved in in vivo toxicity and APN binding. Mutations within domain III affected binding rates to APN site 1, whereas mutations in domain II affected binding rates to APN site 2. Furthermore, domain III contact is completely inhibited in the presence of N-acetylgalactosamine, indicating loss of domain III binding eliminates all APN binding. Based upon these observations, the following model is proposed. A cavity in lectin-like domain III initiates docking through recognition of an N-acetylgalactosamine moiety on L. dispar APN. Following primary docking, a higher affinity domain II binding mechanism occurs, which is critical for insecticidal activity.  相似文献   

5.
A I Aronson  D Wu    C Zhang 《Journal of bacteriology》1995,177(14):4059-4065
Two different 30-nucleotide regions of the cryIAc insecticidal protoxin gene from Bacillus thuringiensis were randomly mutagenized. One region was within one of seven amphipathic helices believed to be important for the formation of ion channels. There was no loss of toxicity for three test insects by any of 27 mutants, a result similar to that obtained previously for mutations within another such helix. Only mutations within a region encoding the central helix have resulted in a substantial number of mutants with low or no toxicity. A second mutagenized region encodes amino acids which are unique to this toxin and are within one of the loops in a portion of the toxin important for specificity. Among 21 different mutations of these 10 residues, only changes of two adjacent serine residues resulted in decreased toxicity which was greater for Manduca sexta than for Heliothis virescens larvae. These mutant toxins bound poorly to the single M. sexta CryIAc vesicle-binding protein and to several of the multiple H. virescens-binding proteins. The loop containing these serines must be involved in the formation of a specific toxin recognition domain.  相似文献   

6.
Deletion of amino acid residues 370 to 375 (D2) and single alanine substitutions between residues 371 and 375 (FNIGI) of lepidopteran-active Bacillus thuringiensis CryIAb delta-endotoxin were constructed by site-directed mutagenesis techniques. All mutants, except that with the I-to-A change at position 373 (I373A), produced delta-endotoxin as CryIAb and were stable upon activation either by Manduca sexta gut enzymes or by trypsin. Mutants D2, F371A, and G374A lost most of the toxicity (400 times less) for M. sexta larvae, whereas N372A and I375A were only 2 times less toxic than CryIAb. The results of homologous and heterologous competition binding assays to M. sexta midgut brush border membrane vesicles (BBMV) revealed that the binding curves for all mutant toxins were similar to those for the wild-type toxin. However, a significant difference in irreversible binding was observed between the toxic (CryIAb, N372A, and I375A) and less-toxic (D2, F371A, and G374A) proteins. Only 20 to 25% of bound, radiolabeled CryIAb, N372A, and I375A toxins was dissociated from BBMV, whereas about 50 to 55% of the less-toxic mutants, D2, F371A, and G374A, was dissociated from their binding sites by the addition of excess nonlabeled ligand. Voltage clamping experiments provided further evidence that the insecticidal property (inhibition of short-circuit current across the M. sexta midgut) was directly correlated to irreversible interaction of the toxin with the BBMV. We have also shown that CryIAb and mutant toxins recognize 210- and 120-kDa peptides in ligand blotting. Our results imply that mutations in residues 370 to 375 of domain II of CrylAb do not affect overall binding but do affect the irreversible association of the toxin to the midgut columnar epithelial cells of M. sexta.  相似文献   

7.
The crystal insecticidal proteins from Bacillus thuringiensis are modular proteins comprised of three domains connected by single linkers. Domain I is a seven alpha-helix bundle, which has been involved in membrane insertion and pore formation activity. Site-directed mutagenesis has contributed to identify regions that might play an important role in the structure of the pore-forming domain within the membrane. There are several evidences that support that the hairpin alpha4-alpha5 inserts into the membrane in an antiparallel manner, while other helices lie on the membrane surface. We hypothesized that highly conserved residues of alpha5 could play an important role in toxin insertion, oligomerization and/or pore formation. A total of 15 Cry1Ab mutants located in six conserved residues of Cry1Ab, Y153, Y161, H168, R173, W182 and G183, were isolated. Eleven mutants were located within helix alpha5, one mutant was located in the loop alpha4-alpha5 and three mutants, W182P, W182I and G183C, were located in the loop alpha5-alpha6. Their effect on binding, K(+) permeability and toxicity against Manduca sexta larvae was analyzed and compared. The results provide direct evidence that some residues located within alpha5 have an important role in stability of the toxin within the insect gut, while some others also have an important role in pore formation. The results also provide evidence that conserved residues within helix alpha5 are not involved in oligomer formation since mutations in these residues are able to make pores in vitro.  相似文献   

8.
Five economically important crop pests, Manduca sexta, Pieris brassicae, Mamestra brassicae, Spodoptera exigua, and Agrotis ipsilon, were tested at two stages of larval development for susceptibility to Bacillus thuringiensis toxins Cry1Ac, Cry1Ca, Cry1J, and Cry1Ba. Bioassay results for M. sexta showed that resistance to all four Cry toxins increased from the neonate stage to the third-instar stage; the increase in resistance was most dramatic for Cry1Ac, the potency of which decreased 37-fold. More subtle increases in resistance during larval development were seen in M. brassicae for Cry1Ca and in P. brassicae for Cry1Ac and Cry1J. By contrast, the sensitivity of S. exigua did not change during development. At both larval stages, A. ipsilon was resistant to all four toxins. Because aminopeptidase N (APN) is a putative Cry1 toxin binding protein, APN activity was measured in neonate and third-instar brush border membrane vesicles (BBMV). With the exception of S. exigua, APN activity was found to be significantly lower in neonates than in third-instar larvae and thus inversely correlated with increased resistance during larval development. The binding characteristics of iodinated Cry1 toxins were determined for neonate and third-instar BBMV. In M. sexta, the increased resistance to Cry1Ac and Cry1Ba during larval development was positively correlated with fewer binding sites in third-instar BBMV than in neonate BBMV. The other species-instar-toxin combinations did not reveal positive correlations between potency and binding characteristics. The correlation between binding and potency was inconsistent for the species-instar-toxin combinations used in this study, reaffirming the complex mode of action of Cry1 toxins.  相似文献   

9.
Malany S  Osaka H  Sine SM  Taylor P 《Biochemistry》2000,39(50):15388-15398
The alpha-neurotoxins are three-fingered peptide toxins that bind selectively at interfaces formed by the alpha subunit and its associating subunit partner, gamma, delta, or epsilon of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor. Because the alpha-neurotoxin from Naja mossambica mossambica I shows an unusual selectivity for the alpha gamma and alpha delta over the alpha epsilon subunit interface, residue replacement and mutant cycle analysis of paired residues enabled us to identify the determinants in the gamma and delta sequences governing alpha-toxin recognition. To complement this approach, we have similarly analyzed residues on the alpha subunit face of the binding site dictating specificity for alpha-toxin. Analysis of the alpha gamma interface shows unique pairwise interactions between the charged residues on the alpha-toxin and three regions on the alpha subunit located around residue Asp(99), between residues Trp(149) and Val(153), and between residues Trp(187) and Asp(200). Substitutions of cationic residues at positions between Trp(149) and Val(153) markedly reduce the rate of alpha-toxin binding, and these cationic residues appear to be determinants in preventing alpha-toxin binding to alpha 2, alpha 3, and alpha 4 subunit containing receptors. Replacement of selected residues in the alpha-toxin shows that Ser(8) on loop I and Arg(33) and Arg(36) on the face of loop II, in apposition to loop I, are critical to the alpha-toxin for association with the alpha subunit. Pairwise mutant cycle analysis has enabled us to position residues on the concave face of the three alpha-toxin loops with respect to alpha and gamma subunit residues in the alpha-toxin binding site. Binding of NmmI alpha-toxin to the alpha gamma interface appears to have dominant electrostatic interactions not seen at the alpha delta interface.  相似文献   

10.
Gómez I  Dean DH  Bravo A  Soberón M 《Biochemistry》2003,42(35):10482-10489
The identification of epitopes involved in Cry toxin-receptor interaction could provide insights into the molecular basis of insect specificity and for designing new toxins to overcome the potential problem of insect resistance. In previous works, we determined that the Manduca sexta Cry1A cadherin-like receptor (Bt-R(1)) interacts with Cry1A toxins through epitope (865)NITIHITDTNN(875) and by loop 2 of domain II in the toxin (Gomez, I., Miranda-Rios, J., Rudi?o-Pi?era, E., Oltean, D. I., Gill, S. S., Bravo, A., and Soberón, M. (2002) J. Biol. Chem. 277, 30137-30143.). In this work, we narrowed to 12 amino acids a previously identified Bt-R(1) 66 amino acids epitope (Dorsch, J. A., Candas, M., Griko, N. B., Maaty, W. S. A., Midbo, E. G., Vadlamudi, R. K., and Bulla, L. A., Jr. (2002) Insect Biochem. Mol. Biol. 32, 1025-1036) and identified loop alpha-8 of Cry1Ab domain II as its cognate binding epitope. Two amino acid Bt-R(1) toxin binding regions of 70 residues, one comprised of residues 831-900 containing the (865)NITIHITDTNN(875) epitope (TBR1) and the other comprised of residues 1291-1360 (TBR2) were cloned by RT-PCR and produced in Escherichia coli. Cry1A toxins bind with the two TBR regions in contrast with the nontoxic Cry3A toxin. The loop 2 synthetic peptide competed with the binding of Cry1Ab toxin to both TBR regions in contrast to the alpha-8 synthetic peptide that only competed with Cry1Ab binding to TBR2. Western blots and competition ELISA analysis showed that the Cry1Ab loop 2 RR368-9EE mutant did not show observable binding to TBR1 but still bound the TBR2 peptide. This result suggests that loop alpha-8 interacts with the TBR2 region. Competition ELISA analysis of Cry1Ab binding to the two TBR peptides revealed that the toxin binds the TBR1 region with 6-fold higher affinity than the TBR2 region. The amino acid sequence of TBR2 involved on Cry1Ab interaction was narrowed to 12 amino acids, (1331)IPLPASILTVTV(1342), by using synthetic peptides as competitors for Cry1Ab binding to Bt-R(1). Our results show that the specificity of Cry1A involves at least two structural determinants on both molecules.  相似文献   

11.
The primary action of Cry toxins produced by Bacillus thuringiensis is to lyse midgut epithelial cells in their target insect by forming lytic pores. The toxin-receptor interaction is a complex process, involving multiple interactions with different receptor and carbohydrate molecules. It has been proposed that Cry1A toxins sequentially interact with a cadherin receptor, leading to the formation of a pre-pore oligomer structure, and that the oligomeric structure binds to glycosylphosphatidyl-inositol-anchored aminopeptidase-N (APN) receptor. The Cry1Ac toxin specifically recognizes the N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc) carbohydrate present in the APN receptor from Manduca sexta larvae. In this work, we show that the Cry1Ac pre-pore oligomer has a higher binding affinity with APN than the monomeric toxin. The effects of GalNAc binding on the toxin structure were studied in the monomeric Cry1Ac, in the soluble pre-pore oligomeric structure, and in its membrane inserted state by recording the fluorescence status of the tryptophan (W) residues. Our results indicate that the W residues of Cry1Ac have a different exposure to the solvent when compared with that of the closely related Cry1Ab toxin. GalNAc binding specifically affects the exposure of W545 in the pre-pore oligomer in contrast to the monomer where GalNAc binding did not affect the fluorescence of the toxin. These results indicate a subtle conformational change in the GalNAc binding pocket in the pre-pore oligomer that could explain the increased binding affinity of the Cry1Ac pre-pore to APN. Although our analysis did not reveal major structural changes in the pore-forming domain I upon GalNAc binding, it showed that sugar interaction enhanced membrane insertion of soluble pre-pore oligomeric structure. Therefore, the data presented here permits to propose a model in which the interaction of Cry1Ac pre-pore oligomer with APN receptor facilitates membrane insertion and pore formation.  相似文献   

12.
Staphylococcal enterotoxins (SEs) are superantigenic protein toxins responsible for a number of life-threatening diseases. The X-ray structure of a staphylococcal enterotoxin A (SEA) triple-mutant (L48R, D70R, and Y92A) vaccine reveals a cascade of structural rearrangements located in three loop regions essential for binding the alpha subunit of major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC-II) molecules. A comparison of hypothetical model complexes between SEA and the SEA triple mutant with MHC-II HLA-DR1 clearly shows disruption of key ionic and hydrophobic interactions necessary for forming the complex. Extensive dislocation of the disulfide loop in particular interferes with MHC-IIalpha binding. The triple-mutant structure provides new insights into the loss of superantigenicity and toxicity of an engineered superantigen and provides a basis for further design of enterotoxin vaccines.  相似文献   

13.
In susceptible lepidopteran insects, aminopeptidase N and cadherin-like proteins are the putative receptors for Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) toxins. Using phage display, we identified a key epitope that is involved in toxin-receptor interaction. Three different scFv molecules that bind Cry1Ab toxin were obtained, and these scFv proteins have different amino acid sequences in the complementary determinant region 3 (CDR3). Binding analysis of these scFv molecules to different members of the Cry1A toxin family and to Escherichia coli clones expressing different Cry1A toxin domains showed that the three selected scFv molecules recognized only domain II. Heterologous binding competition of Cry1Ab toxin to midgut membrane vesicles from susceptible Manduca sexta larvae using the selected scFv molecules showed that scFv73 competed with Cry1Ab binding to the receptor. The calculated binding affinities (K(d)) of scFv73 to Cry1Aa, Cry1Ab, and Cry1Ac toxins are in the range of 20-51 nm. Sequence analysis showed this scFv73 molecule has a CDR3 significantly homologous to a region present in the cadherin-like protein from M. sexta (Bt-R(1)), Bombyx mori (Bt-R(175)), and Lymantria dispar. We demonstrated that peptides of 8 amino acids corresponding to the CDR3 from scFv73 or to the corresponding regions of Bt-R(1) or Bt-R(175) are also able to compete with the binding of Cry1Ab and Cry1Aa toxins to the Bt-R(1) or Bt-R(175) receptors. Finally, we showed that synthetic peptides homologous to Bt-R(1) and scFv73 CDR3 and the scFv73 antibody decreased the in vivo toxicity of Cry1Ab to M. sexta larvae. These results show that we have identified the amino acid region of Bt-R(1) and Bt-R(175) involved in Cry1A toxin interaction.  相似文献   

14.
In susceptible insects, Cry toxin specificity correlates with receptor recognition. In previous work, we characterized an scFv antibody (scFv73) that inhibits binding of Cry1A toxins to cadherin-like receptor. The CDR3 region of scFv73 shared homology with an 8-amino acid epitope ((869)HITDTNNK(876)) of the Manduca sexta cadherin-like receptor Bt-R(1) (Gomez, I., Oltean, D. I., Gill, S. S., Bravo, A., and Soberón, M. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 28906-28912). In this work, we show that the previous sequence of scFv73 CDR3 region was obtained from the noncoding DNA strand. However, most importantly, both scFv73 CDR3 amino acid sequences of the coding and noncoding DNA strands have similar binding capabilities to Cry1Ab toxin as Bt-R(1) (869)HITDTNNK(876) epitope, as demonstrated by the competition of scFv73 with binding to Cry1Ab with synthetic peptides with amino acid sequences corresponding to these regions. Using synthetic peptides corresponding to three exposed loop regions of domain II of Cry1Aa and Cry1Ab toxins, we found that loop 2 synthetic peptide competed with binding of scFv73 to Cry1A toxins in Western blot experiments. Also, loop 2 mutations that affect toxicity of Cry1Ab toxin are affected in scFv73 binding. Toxin overlay assays of Cry1A toxins to M. sexta brush border membrane proteins showed that loop 2 synthetic peptides competed with binding of Cry1A toxins to cadherin-like Bt-R(1) receptor. These experiments identified loop 2 in domain II of as the cognate binding partner of Bt-R(1) (869)HITDTNNK(876). Finally, 10 amino acids from beta-6-loop 2 region of Cry1Ab toxin ((363)SSTLYRRPFNI(373)) showed hydropathic pattern complementarity to a 10-amino acid region of Bt-R(1) ((865)NITIHITDTNN(875)), suggesting that binding of Cry1A toxins to Bt-R(1) is determined by hydropathic complementarity and that the binding epitope of Bt-R(1) may be larger than the one identified by amino acid sequence similarity to scFv73.  相似文献   

15.
Phage display is an in vitro method for selecting polypeptides with desired properties from a large collection of variants. The insecticidal Cry toxins produced by Bacillus thuringiensis are highly specific to different insects. Various proteins such as cadherin, aminopeptidase-N (APN) and alkaline phosphatase (ALP) have been characterized as potential Cry-receptors. We used phage display to characterize the Cry toxin-receptor interaction(s). By employing phage-libraries that display single-chain antibodies (scFv) from humans or from immunized rabbits with Cry1Ab toxin or random 12-residues peptides, we have identified the epitopes that mediate binding of lepidopteran Cry1Ab toxin with cadherin and APN receptors from Manduca sexta and the interaction of dipteran Cry11Aa toxin with the ALP receptor from Aedes aegypti. Finally we displayed in phages the Cry1Ac toxin and discuss the potential for selecting Cry variants with improved toxicity or different specificity.  相似文献   

16.
To study the molecular basis of differences in the insecticidal spectrum of Bacillus thuringienesis delta-endotoxins, we have performed binding studies with three delta-endotoxins on membrane preparations from larval insect mid-gut. Conditions for a standard binding assay were established through a detailed study of the binding of 125I-labeled Bt2 toxin, a recombinant B. thuringiensis delta-endotoxin, to brush border membrane vesicles of Manduca sexta. The toxins tested (Bt2, Bt3 and Bt73 toxins) are about equally toxic to M. sexta but differ in their toxicity against Heliothis virescens. Equilibrium binding studies revealed saturable, high-affinity binding sites on brush border membrane vesicles of M. sexta and H. virescens. While the affinity of the three toxins was not significantly different on H. virescens vesicles, marked differences in binding site concentration were measured which reflected the differences in in vivo toxicity. Competition experiments revealed heterogeneity in binding sites. For H. virescens, a three-site model was proposed. In M. sexta, one population of binding sites is shared by all three toxins, while another is only recognized by Bt3 toxin. Several other toxins, non-toxic or much less toxic to M. sexta than Bt2 toxin, did not or only marginally displace binding of 125I-labeled Bt2 toxin in this insect. No saturable binding of this toxin was observed to membrane preparations from tissues of several non-susceptible organisms. Together, these data provide new evidence that binding to a specific receptor on the membrane of gut epithelial cells is an important determinant with respect to differences in insecticidal spectrum of B. thuringiensis insecticidal crystal proteins.  相似文献   

17.
Based on the observation of large conductance states formed by Bacillus thuringiensis Cry toxins in synthetic planar lipid bilayers and the estimation of a pore size of 10-20 A, it has been proposed that the pore could be formed by an oligomer containing four to six Cry toxin monomers. However, there is a lack of information regarding the insertion of Cry toxins into the membrane and oligomer formation. Here we provide direct evidence showing that the intermolecular interaction between Cry1Ab toxin monomers is a necessary step for pore formation and toxicity. Two Cry1Ab mutant proteins affected in different steps of their mode of action (F371A in receptor binding and H168F in pore formation) were affected in toxicity against Manduca sexta larvae. Binding analysis showed that F371A protein bound more efficiently to M. sexta brush border membrane vesicles when mixed with H168F in a one to one ratio. These mutant proteins also recovered pore-formation activity, measured with a fluorescent dye with isolated brush border membrane vesicles, and toxicity against M. sexta larvae when mixed, showing that monomers affected in different steps of their mode of action can form functional hetero-oligomers.  相似文献   

18.
19.
The insecticidal Cry toxins produced by the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis are comprised of three structural domains. Domain I, a seven-helix bundle, is thought to penetrate the insect epithelial cell plasma membrane through a hairpin composed of alpha-helices 4 and 5, followed by the oligomerization of four hairpin monomers. The alpha-helix 4 has been proposed to line the lumen of the pore, whereas some residues in alpha-helix 5 have been shown to be responsible for oligomerization. Mutation of the Cry1Ac1 alpha-helix 4 amino acid Asn135 to Gln resulted in the loss of toxicity to Manduca sexta, yet binding was still observed. In this study, the equivalent mutation was made in the Cry1Ab5 toxin, and the properties of both wild-type and mutant toxin counterparts were analyzed. Both mutants appeared to bind to M. sexta membrane vesicles, but they were not able to form pores. The ability of both N135Q mutants to oligomerize was also disrupted, providing the first evidence that a residue in alpha-helix 4 can contribute to toxin oligomerization.  相似文献   

20.
Domain I of the Cry1Ab insecticidal toxic protein has seven alpha-helices and is considered to be involved in the ion channel activity. While other alpha-helices, particularly alpha-4 and alpha-5, have been extensively explored, the remaining alpha-helices have been slightly studied. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to generate mutations throughout sequences encoding the alpha-helix 7 to test its role in ion channel function. Every amino acid residue in alpha-helix 7 was mutated to alanine. Most resultant proteins, e.g., D225A, W226A, Y229A, N230A, R233A, R234A, D242A, and F247A yielded no protoxin or were sensitive to degradation by trypsin or Manduca sexta midgut juice. Other mutant proteins, R224A, R228A, and E235A, were resistant to degradation to the above proteases but were 8, 30, and 12 times less toxic to M. sexta, respectively, than the wild-type Cry1Ab. Circular dichroism spectroscopy indicated a very small change in the R228A spectrum, while R224A and E235A display the same spectrum as the wild-type protein. These three mutant proteins showed little differences from Cry1Ab when analyzed by saturation binding and competition binding kinetics with (125)I-labeled toxin or by surface plasmon resonance to M. sexta brush border membrane vesicles. More conservative amino acid substitutions were introduced into alpha-helix 7 residues: R228K, F232Y, E235Q, and F247Y. In comparison with wild-type Cry1Ab, mutant proteins R228K, F232Y, E235A, and E235Q selectively discriminate between K+ and Rb+, while R224A and R228A had reduced inhibition of short-circuit current for both ions, when analyzed by voltage clamping of M. sexta midguts.  相似文献   

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