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  4. X-ray and Cryo-electron Microscopy Structures of Monalysin Pore-forming Toxin Reveal Multimerization of the Pro-form
 
research article

X-ray and Cryo-electron Microscopy Structures of Monalysin Pore-forming Toxin Reveal Multimerization of the Pro-form

Leone, Philippe
•
Bebeacua, Cecilia
•
Opota, Onya
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2015
Journal of Biological Chemistry

beta-Barrel pore-forming toxins (beta-PFT), a large family of bacterial toxins, are generally secreted as water-soluble monomers and can form oligomeric pores in membranes following proteolytic cleavage and interaction with cell surface receptors. Monalysin has been recently identified as a beta-PFT that contributes to the virulence of Pseudomonas entomophila against Drosophila. It is secreted as a pro-protein that becomes active upon cleavage. Here we report the crystal and cryo-electron microscopy structure of the pro-form of Monalysin as well as the crystal structures of the cleaved form and of an inactive mutant lacking the membrane-spanning region. The overall structure of Monalysin displays an elongated shape, which resembles those of beta-poreforming toxins, such as Aerolysin, but is devoid of a receptorbinding domain. X-ray crystallography, cryo-electron microscopy, and light-scattering studies show that pro-Monalysin forms a stable doughnut-like 18-mer complex composed of two disk-shaped nonamers held together by N-terminal swapping of the pro-peptides. This observation is in contrast with the monomeric pro-form of the other beta-PFTs that are receptor-dependent for membrane interaction. The membrane-spanning region of pro-Monalysin is fully buried in the center of the doughnut, suggesting that upon cleavage of pro-peptides, the two disk-shaped nonamers can, and have to, dissociate to leave the transmembrane segments free to deploy and lead to pore formation. In contrast with other toxins, the delivery of 18 subunits at once, nearby the cell surface, may be used to bypass the requirement of receptor-dependent concentration to reach the threshold for oligomerization into the pore-forming complex.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1074/jbc.M115.646109
Web of Science ID

WOS:000354975700021

Author(s)
Leone, Philippe
Bebeacua, Cecilia
Opota, Onya
Kellenberger, Christine
Klaholz, Bruno
Orlov, Igor
Cambillau, Christian
Lemaitre, Bruno  
Roussel, Alain
Date Issued

2015

Publisher

American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Published in
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume

290

Issue

21

Start page

13191

End page

13201

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
UPLEM  
Available on Infoscience
September 28, 2015
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/119376
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