| Literature DB >> 34051233 |
Carlos Angel Espinosa-Vinals1, Jiri Masin2, Jana Holubova2, Ondrej Stanek2, David Jurnecka2, Radim Osicka2, Peter Sebo3, Ladislav Bumba4.
Abstract
The whooping cough agent Bordetella pertussis secretes an adenylate cyclase toxin (CyaA) that through its large carboxy-proximal Repeat-in-ToXin (RTX) domain binds the complement receptor 3 (CR3). The RTX domain consists of five blocks (I-V) of characteristic glycine and aspartate-rich nonapeptides that fold into five Ca2+-loaded parallel β-rolls. Previous work indicated that the CR3-binding structure comprises the interface of β-rolls II and III. To test if further portions of the RTX domain contribute to CR3 binding, we generated a construct with the RTX block II/III interface (CyaA residues 1132-1294) linked directly to the C-terminal block V fragment bearing the folding scaffold (CyaA residues 1562-1681). Despite deletion of 267 internal residues of the RTX domain, the Ca2+-driven folding of the hybrid block III/V β-roll still supported formation of the CR3-binding structure at the interface of β-rolls II and III. Moreover, upon stabilization by N- and C-terminal flanking segments, the block III/V hybrid-comprising constructs competed with CyaA for CR3 binding and induced formation of CyaA toxin-neutralizing antibodies in mice. Finally, a truncated CyaAΔ1295-1561 toxin bound and penetrated erythrocytes and CR3-expressing cells, showing that the deleted portions of RTX blocks III, IV, and V (residues 1295-1561) were dispensable for CR3 binding and for toxin translocation across the target cell membrane. This suggests that almost a half of the RTX domain of CyaA is not involved in target cell interaction and rather serves the purpose of toxin secretion.Entities:
Keywords: Bordetella pertussis; CD11b/CD18 integrin receptor; RTX toxin; adenylate cyclase toxin
Year: 2021 PMID: 34051233 DOI: 10.1016/j.jbc.2021.100833
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157