| Literature DB >> 23710203 |
Andreas F-P Sonnen1, Philipp Henneke.
Abstract
Protein toxins are important virulence factors contributing to neonatal sepsis. The major pathogens of neonatal sepsis, group B Streptococci, Escherichia coli, Listeria monocytogenes, and Staphylococcus aureus, secrete toxins of different molecular nature, which are key for defining the disease. Amongst these toxins are pore-forming exotoxins that are expressed as soluble monomers prior to engagement of the target cell membrane with subsequent formation of an aqueous membrane pore. Membrane pore formation is not only a means for immediate lysis of the targeted cell but also a general mechanism that contributes to penetration of epithelial barriers and evasion of the immune system, thus creating survival niches for the pathogens. Pore-forming toxins, however, can also contribute to the induction of inflammation and hence to the manifestation of sepsis. Clearly, pore-forming toxins are not the sole factors that drive sepsis progression, but they often act in concert with other bacterial effectors, especially in the initial stages of neonatal sepsis manifestation.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23710203 PMCID: PMC3655490 DOI: 10.1155/2013/608456
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Dev Immunol ISSN: 1740-2522
Figure 1Ways to damage a lipid membrane. There are various mechanisms of membrane damage by protein toxins. Amphiphilic toxins can integrate into the membrane and essentially solubilise the lipid membrane like a detergent (structure: S. aureus δ-toxin, PDB ID 2KAM). Similarly, the membrane lipids can be hydrolysed by phospholipases also resulting in the destruction of the membrane (structure: Clostridium, perfringens α-toxin, PDB ID 1KHO, [165]). By far the largest class of membrane damaging toxins is that of the pore-forming toxins (structure: α-toxin from S. aureus, PDB ID 7AHL, [100]). These toxins integrate as stable channels into the lipid bilayer, thus creating an aqueous connection between the cytosol and the extracellular space of the target cell.
Figure 2Pore formation is a dynamic process with structurally and functionally distinct states. Distinct molecular states exist on the path to membrane pore formation by PFTs. The toxin is secreted by the bacterial pathogen into the extracellular medium in a water-soluble form, usually as a monomer. Upon engagement of the membrane via binding to a receptor (step 1), for example, a membrane lipid or protein, the monomers assemble to a prepore oligomer (step 2). The membrane beneath the prepore oligomer remains intact and is only punctured once the prepore refolds to the membrane-inserted pore oligomer (step 3). This step usually goes along with considerable structural rearrangements.
Figure 3Structures of PFTs that are important for neonatal sepsis. Panel (a) shows available structures of cholesterol-dependent cytolysins to illustrate listeriolysins' mechanism of pore formation. (a1) displays the crystal structure of the soluble, monomeric form of perfringolysin from Clostridium perfringens (left, PDB ID 1PFO, [57]). The cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) reconstruction of the prepore (EM databank: 1106) of the listeriolysin homologue pneumolysin from Streptococcus pneumoniae displayed on the right revealed that the protomer configuration in the prepore resembles that of the soluble monomer [16]. Lipid membrane is coloured yellow. Molecular modeling of the protomer fitted into the cryo-EM pore structure below (EM databank: 1107) revealed the considerable structural rearrangements that accompany membrane pore formation. The α-helices that refold into β-sheets are coloured in red. Panel (b) shows the different structures available for ClyA from E. coli, (b1) the soluble state (PDDid 1QOY, [148]) monomer and (b2) a protomer from the dodecameric pore state, which is shown as side and top view on the right (PDB ID 2WCD, [149]). Pore-lining α-helices are in red and the β-tongue in yellow. Panel (c) shows the PFTs from S. aureus. (c1) shows from top to bottom LukF (PDB ID 1LKF, [113]), LukF-PV (PDB ID 1PVL, [114]), and LukS-PV (PDB ID 1T5R, [115]). (c2) shows the octameric pore structure of γ-hemolysin (PDB ID 3B07, [116]), protomer on the left, side and top views on the right. (c3) displays the heptameric pore structure of the AFT pore (PDB ID 7AHL, [100]), individual protomer, side and tops views. The β-stem that unfolds into the membrane lining, extended β-hairpin is shown in red.