| Literature DB >> 8244934 |
Abstract
Recent X-ray crystallographic analyses have demonstrated that the receptor-binding (B) subunits of Shiga toxin (STX) are arranged as a doughnut-shaped pentamer. The C terminus of the enzymatic (A) subunit presumably penetrates the nonpolar pore of the STX B pentamer, and the holotoxin is stabilized by noncovalent interactions between the polypeptides. We identified a stretch of nine nonpolar amino acids near the C terminus of StxA which were required for subunit association by using site-directed mutagenesis to introduce progressive C-terminal deletions in the polypeptide and assessing holotoxin formation by a receptor analog enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, immunoprecipitation, and a cytotoxicity assay. Tryptophan and aspartic acid residues which form the N-terminal boundary, as well as two arginine residues which form the C-terminal boundary of the nine-amino-acid sequence, were implicated as the stabilizers of subunit association. Our model proposes that residues 279 to 287 of the 293-amino-acid STX A subunit penetrate the pore while the tryptophan, aspartic acid, and 2 arginine residues interact with other charged or aromatic amino acids outside the pore on the planar surfaces of the STX B pentamer.Entities:
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Year: 1993 PMID: 8244934 PMCID: PMC206922 DOI: 10.1128/jb.175.23.7652-7657.1993
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Bacteriol ISSN: 0021-9193 Impact factor: 3.490