| Literature DB >> 26802078 |
Tomas Wald1, Adriana Osickova2, Jiri Masin1, Petra M Liskova3, Inga Petry-Podgorska4, Tomas Matousek4, Peter Sebo1, Radim Osicka5.
Abstract
Adenylate cyclase toxin-hemolysin (CyaA, ACT or AC-Hly) of the whooping cough agent Bordetella pertussis penetrates phagocytes expressing the integrin complement receptor 3 (CR3, CD11b/CD18, α(M)β(2) or Mac-1). CyaA translocates its adenylate cyclase (AC) enzyme domain into cell cytosol and catalyzes unregulated conversion of ATP to cAMP, thereby subverting cellular signaling. In parallel, CyaA forms small cation-selective membrane pores that permeabilize cells for potassium efflux, contributing to cytotoxicity of CyaA and eventually provoking colloid-osmotic cell lysis. To investigate whether the single-pass α-helical transmembrane segments of CR3 subunits CD11b and CD18 do directly participate in AC domain translocation and/or pore formation by the toxin, we expressed in CHO cells variants of CR3 that contained artificial transmembrane segments, or lacked the transmembrane segment(s) at all. The results demonstrate that the transmembrane segments of CR3 are not directly involved in the cytotoxic activities of CyaA but serve for maintaining CR3 in a conformation that is required for efficient toxin binding and action. © FEMS 2016. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.Entities:
Keywords: CD11b/CD18; CyaA; ICP-MS; adenylate cyclase toxin; complement receptor 3; transmembrane segment
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26802078 DOI: 10.1093/femspd/ftw008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathog Dis ISSN: 2049-632X Impact factor: 3.166