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  4. The staphylococcal alpha-toxin pore has a flexible conformation
 
research article

The staphylococcal alpha-toxin pore has a flexible conformation

Vecsey-Semjen, B.
•
Knapp, S.
•
Möllby, R.
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1999
Biochemistry

The alpha-toxin from Staphylococcus aureus undergoes several conformational changes from the time it is released from the bacterium to the moment it forms a channel in the plasma membrane of its target cell. It is initially a soluble monomer, which undergoes membrane binding and oligomerization into a heptameric ring and finally inserts into the lipid bilayer to form a pore. Here we have analyzed the stability of different forms of the alpha-toxin (monomer as well as heptamers in solution, bound to the membrane and membrane-inserted) by differential scanning calorimetry and limited proteolysis. Data presented here show that, in contrast to both the membrane-bound prepore complex and the monomer in solution, the membrane-inserted alpha-toxin channel does not undergo cooperative unfolding and is highly susceptible to proteases. These observations suggest that the channel has a looser conformation. Interestingly, resistance to proteases could be recovered upon solubilization of the channel, indicating that the loss of rigid tertiary packing only occurred upon membrane insertion. Far-UV CD data, however, suggest that the transmembrane beta-barrel must be stably folded and that therefore only the Cap and Rim domains of the channel are loosely packed. All together, our data show that the alpha-toxin channel is not a rigid complex within the membrane but adopts a rather flexible conformation.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/bi982472k
Author(s)
Vecsey-Semjen, B.
•
Knapp, S.
•
Möllby, R.
•
van der Goot, F.G.  
Date Issued

1999

Published in
Biochemistry
Volume

38

Issue

14

Start page

4296

End page

302

Subjects

Bacterial Toxins/*chemistry/metabolism

•

Hemolysin Proteins/*chemistry/metabolism

•

Hydrolysis

•

Ion Channels/*chemistry

•

Liposomes/chemistry

•

Models

•

Molecular

•

Peptide Fragments/chemistry/metabolism

•

Phosphatidylcholines/chemistry

•

Phosphatidylglycerols/chemistry

•

Pronase

•

Protein Conformation

•

Protein Folding

•

Staphylococcus/*chemistry

•

Temperature

Note

Microbiology and Tumorbiology Center, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
VDG  
Available on Infoscience
January 30, 2009
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/34609
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