Arresting and releasing Staphylococcal α-hemolysin at intermediate stages of pore formation by engineered disulfide bonds

被引:55
作者
Kawate, T
Gouaux, E
机构
[1] Columbia Univ, Dept Biochem & Mol Biophys, New York, NY 10032 USA
[2] Columbia Univ, Howard Hughes Med Inst, New York, NY 10032 USA
关键词
double cysteine mutants; disulfide bonds; assembly intermediate; pore-forming toxin; Staphylococcal alpha-hemolysin;
D O I
10.1110/ps.0231203
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
alpha-Hemolysin (alphaHL) is secreted by Staphylococcus aureus as a water-soluble monomer that assembles into a heptamer to form a transmembrane pore on a target membrane. The crystal structures of the LukF water-soluble monomer and the membrane-bound alpha-hemolysin heptamer show that large conformational changes occur during assembly. However, the mechanism of assembly and pore formation is still unclear, primarily because of the difficulty in obtaining structural information on assembly intermediates. Our goal is to use disulfide bonds to selectively arrest and release alphaHL from intermediate stages of the assembly process and to use these mutants to test mechanistic hypotheses. To accomplish this, we created four double cysteine mutants, D108C/K154C (alphaHL-A), M113C/K147C (alphaHL-B), H48C/N121C (alphaHL-C), 15C/G130C (alphaHL-D), in which disulfide bonds may form between the pre-stem domain and the beta-sandwich domain to prevent pre-stem rearrangement and membrane insertion. Among the four mutants, alphaHL-A is remarkably stable, is produced at a level at least 10-fold greater than that of the wild-type protein, is monomeric in aqueous solution, and has hemolytic activity that can be regulated by the presence or absence of reducing agents. Cross-linking analysis showed that alphaHL-A assembles on a membrane into an oligomer, which is likely to be a heptamer, in the absence of a reducing agent, suggesting that oxidized alphaHL-A is halted at a heptameric prepore state. Therefore, conformational rearrangements at positions 108 and 154 are critical for the completion of alphaHL assembly but are not essential for membrane binding or for formation of an oligomeric prepore intermediate.
引用
收藏
页码:997 / 1006
页数:10
相关论文
共 42 条
[1]   STAPHYLOCOCCAL ALPHA-TOXIN - OLIGOMERIZATION OF HYDROPHILIC MONOMERS TO FORM AMPHIPHILIC HEXAMERS INDUCED THROUGH CONTACT WITH DEOXYCHOLATE DETERGENT MICELLES [J].
BHAKDI, S ;
FUSSLE, R ;
TRANUMJENSEN, J .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 1981, 78 (09) :5475-5479
[2]   In vitro studies of membrane protein folding [J].
Booth, PJ ;
Templer, RH ;
Meijberg, W ;
Allen, SJ ;
Curran, AR ;
Lorch, M .
CRITICAL REVIEWS IN BIOCHEMISTRY AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 2001, 36 (06) :501-603
[3]   Staphylococcal α-hemolysin can form hexamers in phospholipid bilayers [J].
Czajkowsky, DM ;
Sheng, ST ;
Shao, ZF .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 1998, 276 (02) :325-330
[4]   GLOBAL FLEXIBILITY IN A SENSORY RECEPTOR - A SITE-DIRECTED CROSS-LINKING APPROACH [J].
FALKE, JJ ;
KOSHLAND, DE .
SCIENCE, 1987, 237 (4822) :1596-1600
[5]   The heptameric prepore of a Staphylococcal alpha-hemolysin mutant in lipid bilayers imaged by atomic force microscopy [J].
Fang, Y ;
Cheley, S ;
Bayley, H ;
Yang, J .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 1997, 36 (31) :9518-9522
[6]  
Gouaux E, 1997, PROTEIN SCI, V6, P2631
[7]   α-hemolysin from Staphylococcus aureus:: An archetype of β-barrel, channel-forming toxins [J].
Gouaux, E .
JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY, 1998, 121 (02) :110-122
[8]   SUBUNIT STOICHIOMETRY OF STAPHYLOCOCCAL ALPHA-HEMOLYSIN IN CRYSTALS AND ON MEMBRANES - A HEPTAMERIC TRANSMEMBRANE PORE [J].
GOUAUX, JE ;
BRAHA, O ;
HOBAUGH, MR ;
SONG, LZ ;
CHELEY, S ;
SHUSTAK, C ;
BAYLEY, H .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1994, 91 (26) :12828-12831
[9]   SWISS-MODEL and the Swiss-PdbViewer: An environment for comparative protein modeling [J].
Guex, N ;
Peitsch, MC .
ELECTROPHORESIS, 1997, 18 (15) :2714-2723
[10]   The disulphide beta-cross: From cystine geometry and clustering to classification of small disulphide-rich protein folds [J].
Harrison, PM ;
Sternberg, MJE .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 1996, 264 (03) :603-623