| Literature DB >> 34747994 |
Joshua T Benton1,2, Charles Bayly-Jones1,2.
Abstract
Pore-forming proteins (PFPs) are a broad class of molecules that comprise various families, structural folds, and assembly pathways. In nature, PFPs are most often deployed by their host organisms to defend against other organisms. In humans, this is apparent in the immune system, where several immune effectors possess pore-forming activity. Furthermore, applications of PFPs are found in next-generation low-cost DNA sequencing, agricultural crop protection, pest control, and biosensing. The advent of cryoEM has propelled the field forward. Nevertheless, significant challenges and knowledge-gaps remain. Overcoming these challenges is particularly important for the development of custom, purpose-engineered PFPs with novel or desired properties. Emerging single-molecule techniques and methods are helping to address these unanswered questions. Here we review the current challenges, problems, and approaches to studying PFPs.Entities:
Keywords: agricultural bioscience; imaging techniques; membrane proteins; nanotechnology; pore-forming toxins; protein engineering
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34747994 PMCID: PMC8892993 DOI: 10.1042/BST20210706
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Soc Trans ISSN: 0300-5127 Impact factor: 5.407
Figure 1.Pore-forming proteins are structurally diverse.
(A) Protomers of lysenin (RCSB Protein Data Bank [PDB] ID code 3ZXG), Bacillus thuringiensis Cry1Aa (PDB: 1CIY), aerolysin (PDB: 3G4N), Fragaceatoxin C (FraC; PDB: 3LIM), perforin (PDB: 3NSJ) and Photorhabdus luminescens Tc holotoxin (TcdA1; PDB: 6RW6). Motifs/domains responsible for membrane insertion and membrane binding are coloured red and orange, respectively. (B) Schematic depicting a generic pathway for pore formation into a lipid membrane based on MACPF/CDC pore-forming systems. Soluble components, typically monomers, bind the membrane. Several monomers subsequently come together to form oligomers. Oligomeric intermediates undergo a conformational change inserting transmembrane amphipathic regions into the lipid bilayer, forming an aqueous channel. Some other PFPs systems oligomerise in solution before binding the bilayer. Membrane penetration may precede oligomerisation in some systems. The stoichiometry of the various intermediates is highly dependent on the pore-forming system. Additional intermediates (not depicted) may also be present. (C) Pore forms (volume rendering in UCSF Chimera) of pleurotolysin (PDB: 4V2T), α-haemolysin (PDB: 3M2L), SmhB (PDB: 7A0G) and ClyA (PDB: 6MRW). Low-pass filtered cryoEM maps of aerolysin (EMDB-8187), lysenin (EMDB-8015) and Photorhabdus luminescens Tc holotoxin (TcdA1; EMDB-10313). A single protomer from each pore is coloured purple (and orange, for the two-component system of pleurotolysin). Where applicable, detergent or lipids are coloured yellow. Scale bar is 100 Å for A and C.
Figure 2.Static and dynamic processes elucidated by cryoEM.
(A) Microfluidic devices enable complex biochemistry and processes to be performed and studied on-chip. These chips also enable rapid, time-resolved cryoEM. Shown from left to right: microfluidic buffer exchange, time delay for temporal control, liposome generation, mixing of reactions and last, the coupling of detectors/optics to a microfluidic chip for data collection. (B) Membrane mimetic technologies enable structural studies of PFPs in a near-native lipid membrane context. Shown are various examples of nanodiscs [15,161–163], liposomes [39,163], detergent [4] and amphipols [88,164] which have all been used to study the pore and prepore forms of PFPs. Select cryoEM examples; MPEG1 [39], XaxAB [4], Anthrax toxin [15] and polyC9 [88] (C) Microfluidic and in situ time-resolved cryoEM techniques provide structural insight over small increments of time. Panel C reproduced from Voss et al. [90]. Stimulation by laser (red) melts the vitreous ice, enabling rapid (photo-dependent; ‘stimulus') conformational changes to occur before re-vitrification. Followed by standard cryoEM imaging (green).
Figure 3.State of the art techniques for studying PFPs.
(A) Schematic illustration of AFM height topology measurement. Light is reflected off an atomically small tip which traces the assembly of PFPs (MAC; illustrated) in real-time. All AFM images reproduced [39,53,102,104,165]. (B) Single-channel conductance measured over a bilayer. Opening-closing of channels (hypothetical trace; orange/purple) reveals different stoichiometric states (histogram; S0–S3). ClyA example reproduced from Fahie et al. [118]. (C) Illustration of single-molecule TIRF microscopy. Immobilised liposomes with an encapsulated fluorescent dye (purple) are tethered to a coverslip. Fluorescently labelled PFPs (green) are flowed over the surface via microfluidics. Accumulation of PFP on the liposome is measured in the PFP channel (not shown), while simultaneously membrane integrity is measured in the liposome channel (four still frames). Pore formation is captured as the sudden loss of fluorescent dye signal upon liposome rupture (circled; Personal correspondence, A/Prof Till Bölking, UNSW). (D) Schematic diagram of interface bilayer TIRF microscopy. Below; PFO monomers (green) diffuse on the lipid bilayer over time. Insertion is measured as a sudden loss of diffusion. Modified from Senior et al. [56]. (E) Examples of PFP systems constructed and studied in silico by MD simulations. Both membrane properties and pore dynamics can be examined (left-most three [atomistic], far right [coarse grain]). Reproduced from Varadarajan et al. Cheerla et al. and Vögele et al. [74,121,122].
Comparison of various membrane mimetic and substitute technologies
| TOOL | ADVANTAGES/BENEFITS | DISADVANTAGES/CHALLENGES | EXAMPLES |
|---|---|---|---|
| LIPOSOMES |
Closely mimics native membrane (fluidity, width, phase transitions) Mediates complex assembly Diffusion on surface is possible Encapsulate dyes, reagents, etc. Compartment forming (chemical gradients, assays, etc) Easily deposited onto a surface Simple to produce, size is controllable. |
Instability - prone to burst or aggregate Heterogeneous (composition, protein binding, size) Not effective for solubilisation Difficult to freeze, requires thick ice and complicates high-resolution cryoEM reconstruction (strong incoherent signal) Large enough to scatter light Screening lipid compositions is low throughput | CryoEM (1–4) AFM (5,6) SCC (7) LM (8) |
|
NANODISCS MSP1D1 cMSP26 NW50 |
Highly stable Can derive lipids native bilayers Smaller than liposomes (reducing ice thickness for cryoEM studies) Stabilisation of hydrophobic regions (like detergent) Mediates complex assembly Amenable to further purification Genetically encoded allowing customisation Click-chemistry compatible |
Lipids in nanodiscs have altered properties compared to lipids in cell membranes Low surface area (diffusion dependent process) Production and purification are labour intensive Often requires extensive optimisation Poor efficiency of nanodisc formation, not effective for solubilisation Sizes are relatively limited | CryoEM (9–13) |
| DETERGENT |
Simple and convenient means of solubilisation A broad selection with different chemistries Can induce spontaneous oligomerisation and/or pore formation Amenable to further purification |
Do not provide a surface for assembly Detergent micelles are topologically different to native membranes Can introduce structural artefacts Protein stability is often an issue Lack protein/lipid interactions Empty micelles can interfere with cryoEM image processing | CryoEM (14–20) |
| AMPHIPOLS |
Less likely to destabilise structure compared to detergent Stable, even when diluted Can be chemically modified or conjugated No interference with light-based experiments |
Does not provide an assembly surface Not suitable at acidic pH or in excessive divalent ions. Cannot directly solubilise MPs Difficult to synthesis Polydisperse | CryoEM (21–24) |
| SMALPS |
Detergent-free solubilisation of MPs. Maintain native lipids after solubilisation. Useful for lipidomics. Protein-lipids interactions are retained to a greater extent Compatible with further purification Highly stable once SMA disc forms Does not form micelles |
Difficult to synthesise Polydisperse sizes Native bilayer properties are not preserved. Expensive Can affect protein purification | CryoEM (25) MS (26) SCC (27) |
| PEPTIDISC & SAPOSIN |
Diameter of the disc is dependent on the protein diameter Works at low pH Genetically encoded Easy to produce in large quantities |
No assembly surface Does not preserve bilayer properties | |
|
|
Direct observation of sample in native environment |
Low resolution Low throughput Technically complex | CryoET (28,29) AFM (30,31) SCC (32) |
| SUPPORTED LIPID BILAYERS |
Enables visualisation of diffusion dependent processes Large surface area Simple and readily applicable to AFM, SPR, TIRF, etc. |
Lipid diffusion is significantly reduced compared to native bilayers Can easily study and visualise phase transition properties | AFM (5,6,33–35) LM (36–38) |
Figure 4.Translational applications of pore forming protein.
Top row, left to right. Pore-forming proteins (PFPs) are used in next-generation DNA sequencing. DNA is passed through a nanopore (blue) in the presence of an electric current generated by the flow of ions (yellow circles). Characteristic changes in current can be mapped to particular nucleobases (including methylated cytosines [Me]). Similarly, nanopore technology has been applied to proteomics (purple), allowing discrimination of peptides with single amino acid changes. Proteomic nanopores are often coupled with an enzyme (green), such as an unfoldase or helicase, that threads the peptide through the pore. Nanopores are also used in metabolomics to detect small molecules. A nanopore (red) can capture an adaptor protein (green) that binds to a specific metabolite e.g., green amino acid. Metabolite binding induces a conformational change in the adaptor protein, leading to a characteristic change in ion flow through the nanopore. Bottom row, left to right. PFPs have been used to deliver antibodies into mammalian cancer cells. Nanopores (green) provide a passage for antibodies (orange) to cross the cell membrane and bind to their intracellular target (red). PFPs are also a staple pest control agent in agriculture, helping to protect crops from lepidopteran pests. PFPs from the crop (grey) are ingested by the pest, and subsequently perforate cells lining the pest's digestive system. Created with BioRender.com.