| Literature DB >> 22069745 |
Supachoke Mangmool1, Hitoshi Kurose.
Abstract
Pertussis toxin (PTX) is a typical A-B toxin. The A-protomer (S1 subunit) exhibits ADP-ribosyltransferase activity. The B-oligomer consists of four subunits (S2 to S5) and binds extracellular molecules that allow the toxin to enter the cells. The A-protomer ADP-ribosylates the α subunits of heterotrimeric G(i/o) proteins, resulting in the receptors being uncoupled from the G(i/o) proteins. The B-oligomer binds proteins expressed on the cell surface, such as Toll-like receptor 4, and activates an intracellular signal transduction cascade. Thus, PTX modifies cellular responses by at least two different signaling pathways; ADP-ribosylation of the Gα(i/o) proteins by the A-protomer (G(i/o) protein-dependent action) and the interaction of the B-oligomer with cell surface proteins (G(i/o) protein-independent action).Entities:
Keywords: A-protomer; ADP-ribosylation; B-oligomer; G protein-coupled receptor; Gi/o-dependent; Gi/o-independent; Toll-like receptor 4; heterotrimeric G protein; pertussis toxin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22069745 PMCID: PMC3202852 DOI: 10.3390/toxins3070884
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Characteristics of ADP-ribosylating toxins from several virulent strains of bacteria.
| ADP-Ribosylating Toxin | Bacterium | Target | Pathological Effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pertussis toxin | Cysteine residue of Gαi subfamily (Gαi, Gαo, and Gαt) except Gαz | Gαi protein-receptor coupling is inhibited, and its signal transduction is blocked. | |
| Cholera toxin | Arginine residue of Gαs subfamily (Gαs and Gαolf) | As GTPase activity of the stimulatory Gαs is inhibited, Gαs protein is permanently activated. | |
| Heat-labile enterotoxin | Arginine residue of Gαs subfamily (Gαs and Gαolf) | As GTPase activity of stimulatory Gαs is inhibited, the Gαs protein is permanently activated. | |
| Diphtheria toxin | Diphthamide of eEF2 | Protein synthesis is blocked. | |
| Exotoxin A | Diphthamide of eEF2 | Protein synthesis is blocked. |
eEF2 = eukaryotic elongation factor 2.
Figure 1Pertussis toxin (PTX) structural organization. PTX contains five different subunits that are arranged in a typical A-B structure. The A-protomer contains an enzymatically active S1 subunit that is on the top of B-oligomer. The B-oligomer is composed of two dimers, S2-S4 and S3-S4 dimers, which are held together by the S5 subunit.
Figure 2Schematic diagram of the ADP-ribosylation of α subunit of heterotrimeric Gi/o protein by pertussis toxin (PTX). PTX catalyzes the cleavage of the C-N bond between a carbon atom of ribose and a nitrogen atom of nicotinamide, and transfers the ADP-ribosyl moiety to an acceptor molecule.
Figure 3Uncoupling of Gαi/o proteins from their cognate G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR). Activation of GPCRs leads to dissociation of heterotrimeric G protein complex into Gαi/o and βγ subunit. The exchange of GTP from GDP results in activation of the inhibitory G protein (Gαi/o), thereby inhibiting adenylyl cyclase (AC) activity. When the A-protomer of PTX penetrates into the host cells, the Gαi/o is ADP-ribosylated at cysteine residue resulting in inactivation of Gαi/o. The inhibitory effect of Gαi/o on AC activity results in the elevation of intracellular cAMP levels, leading to activation of the cAMP-mediated signaling pathway. This enhanced pathway by PTX is recognized as the Gi/o protein-dependent pathway.
Gαi/o protein family.
| α Subunit | Amino Acid | Expression [ | Effect on Effectors | Toxin (Site of Action) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| αo | 354 | Heart, neurons, neuroendocrine cells | Inhibition of AC activity [ | PTX at cysteine 351 [ |
| Inhibition of Ca2+ channel [ | ||||
| Activation of K+ channel [ | ||||
| αi1-αi3 | 354 | Neurons and ubiquitous | Inhibition of AC activity [ | PTX at cysteine 351 [ |
| Inhibition of Ca2+ channel [ | ||||
| Activation of K+ channel [ | ||||
| αz | 355 | Platelets | Inhibition of AC activity [ | -(cyteine modified by PTX does not present) [ |
| Inhibition of Ca2+ channel [ | ||||
| Activation of K+ channel [ | ||||
| αt | 350 | Rod/cone outer segments | Activation of cGMP-PDE [ | PTX at cysteine 351 [ |
| CTX at arginine147 [ | ||||
| αgust | 353 | Taste buds; sweet and/or bitter | Activation of cGMP-PDE [ | PTX at cysteine 350 [ |
AC: adenylyl cyclase; PDE: phosphodiesterase.
The differences in characteristics of Gi/o protein-dependent and -independent effects of PTX.
| Gi/o Protein-Dependent Effects of PTX | Gi/o Protein-Independent Effects of PTX | |
|---|---|---|
| Subunit | A-protomer (S1 subunit) | B-oligomer (S2-S3 dimer, S2-S5 dimer, and S5 monomer) |
| Onset of action | Slow | Rapid |
| Concentration of toxin to induce the effects | Low | High |
| Biological effects | Enhance insulin secretion
[ | Induce dendritic cell maturation
[ |
| Inhibit lymphocyte and neutrophil migration
[ | Inhibit growth cone guidance
[ | |
| Inhibit enkephalin stimulation of GTPase
[ | Induce myelomonocytic cell adhesion
[ | |
| Inhibit autophosphorylation and activation of insulin receptor kinase
[ | Induce ERK1/2 activation in endothelial cell
[ | |
| Activate platelet aggregation
[ | ||
| Activate T lymphocyte
[ | ||
| Induce Th1/Th17 immune response through MAPK and IL-10
[ | ||
| Activate tyrosine kinase signaling
[ | ||
| Inhibit Tat-induced TGF- β production
[ | ||
| Inhibit HIV type 1 replication
[ |
Figure 4Gi/o protein-dependent and -independent effects of PTX. Following the binding of PTX to host cells, the A-protomer penetrates through the cell membrane. A-protomer is dissociated from B-oligomer and released into the cytoplasm. A-protomer then catalyzes the ADP-ribosylation of Gαi/o that leads to uncoupling of Gαi/o from its cognate inhibitory GPCRs. The inhibitory effect of Gαi/o on AC activity is then halted, resulting in accumulation of cAMP. This action of PTX results in disruption of cellular function through cAMP-mediated signaling pathway (Gi/o protein-dependent effects). In a separate pathway, the B-oligomer binds to and interacts with several targeted proteins on the plasma membrane, leading to the induction of the biological responses that are independent of ADP-ribosylation of Gαi/o protein (Gi/o protein-independent effects).