| Literature DB >> 16250348 |
G Colacicco1, M K Basu, A R Buckelew, A W Bernheimer.
Abstract
Hemolytic delta-toxin from Staphylococcus aureus was soluble in either water, methanol or chloroform/methanol (2 : 1, v/v). The toxin spread readily from distilled water into films with pressures (pi) of 10 dynes/cm on water and 30 dynes/cm on 6 M urea; from chloroform/methanol it produced 40 dynes/cm pressure on distilled water. The toxin adsorbed barely from water (pi = 1 dyne/ cm) but it did rapidly from 6 M urea (pi = 35 dynes/cm). The protein films had unusually high surface potentials, which increased with the film pressure and decreased with increasing both pH and urea concentration in the aqueous phase. The fluorescence of 1-aniline 8-naphthalene sulfonate with delta-toxin was much greater than that with RNAase and dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine itself, indicating probably a marked lipid-binding character of the toxin. By circular dichroism the alpha-helix content of delta-toxin was 42% in water, 45% in methanol, 24% in 6 M urea. Infrared spectroscopy showed predominant alpha-helix in both 2H2O and deuterated chloroform/methanol as well as in films spread from either solvent on 2H2O. In spreading from 6 M [2H]urea, in which the major infrared absorption was that of [2H]urea with peaks at 1600 and 1480 cm(-1), the delta-toxin film showed prevalently non-alpha-helix structures with major peak intensities at 1633 cm(-1) > 1680 cm(-1), indicating the appearance of new beta-aggregated and beta-antiparallel pleated sheet structures in the film. The data prove that (1) high pressure protein films can consist of alpha-helix as well as non-alpha-helix structures and, differently from another cytolytic protein, melittin, delta-toxin does not resume the alpha-helix conformation in going into the film phase from the extended chain in 6 M urea; (2) conformational changes are important in the transport of proteins from aqueous to lipid or membrane phase; (3) delta-toxin is by far more versatile in structural dynamics and more surface active than alpha-toxin.Entities:
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Year: 1977 PMID: 16250348 DOI: 10.1016/0005-2736(77)90087-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochim Biophys Acta ISSN: 0006-3002