ArticleAn approach to characterizing single-subunit mutations in multimeric prepores and pores of anthrax protective antigen |
| Blythe E. Janowiak 1, Alan Finkelstein 2, R. John Collier 1 * |
1Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Harvard Medical School, 200 Longwood Ave., Boston, Massachusetts 02115 2Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University, 1300 Morris Park Ave, Bronx, New York 10461
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| email: R. John Collier (jcollier@hms.harvard.edu) |
*Correspondence to R. John Collier, Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 2115
Funded by:
National Institutes of Health Grants; Grant Number: AI-022021, 1F32-AI-77280, GM-29210
| anthrax toxin translocation planar lipid bilayer cytotoxicity phenylalanine clamp pore formation |
Heptameric pores formed by the protective antigen (PA) moiety of anthrax toxin translocate the intracellular effector moieties of the toxin across the endosomal membrane to the cytosol of mammalian cells. We devised a protocol to characterize the effects of individual mutations in a single subunit of heptameric PA prepores (pore precursors) or pores. We prepared monomeric PA containing a test mutation plus an innocuous Cys-replacement mutation at a second residue (Lys563, located on the external surface of the prepore). The introduced Cys was biotinylated, and the protein was allowed to cooligomerize with a 20-fold excess of wild-type PA. Finally, biotinylated prepores were freed from wild-type prepores by avidin affinity chromatography. For the proof of principle, we examined single-subunit mutations of Asp425 and Phe427, two residues where Ala replacements have been shown to cause strong inhibitory effects. The single-subunit D425A mutation inhibited pore formation by >104 and abrogated activity of PA almost completely in our standard cytotoxicity assay. The single-subunit F427A mutation caused 100-fold inhibition in the cytotoxicity assay, and this effect was shown to result from a combination of strong inhibition of translocation and smaller effects on pore formation and ligand affinity. Our results show definitively that replacing a single residue in one subunit of the heptameric PA prepore can inhibit the transport activity of the oligomer almost completely - and by different mechanisms, depending on the specific residue mutated. |
Received: 3 October 2008; Revised: 3 November 2008; Accepted: 6 November 2008
10.1002/pro.35
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