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Lethal factor unfolding is the most force-dependent step of anthrax toxin translocation.


ABSTRACT: Cellular compartmentalization requires machinery capable of translocating polypeptides across membranes. In many cases, transported proteins must first be unfolded by means of the proton motive force and/or ATP hydrolysis. Anthrax toxin, which is composed of a channel-forming protein and two substrate proteins, is an attractive model system to study translocation-coupled unfolding, because the applied driving force can be externally controlled and translocation can be monitored directly by using electrophysiology. By controlling the driving force and introducing destabilizing point mutations in the substrate, we identified the barriers in the transport pathway, determined which barrier corresponds to protein unfolding, and mapped how the substrate protein unfolds during translocation. In contrast to previous studies, we find that the protein's structure next to the signal tag is not rate-limiting to unfolding. Instead, a more extensive part of the structure, the amino-terminal beta-sheet subdomain, must disassemble to cross the unfolding barrier. We also find that unfolding is catalyzed by the channel's phenylalanine-clamp active site. We propose a broad molecular mechanism for translocation-coupled unfolding, which is applicable to both soluble and membrane-embedded unfolding machines.

SUBMITTER: Thoren KL 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC2779827 | biostudies-literature | 2009 Dec

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Lethal factor unfolding is the most force-dependent step of anthrax toxin translocation.

Thoren Katie L KL   Worden Evan J EJ   Yassif Jaime M JM   Krantz Bryan A BA  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20091119 51


Cellular compartmentalization requires machinery capable of translocating polypeptides across membranes. In many cases, transported proteins must first be unfolded by means of the proton motive force and/or ATP hydrolysis. Anthrax toxin, which is composed of a channel-forming protein and two substrate proteins, is an attractive model system to study translocation-coupled unfolding, because the applied driving force can be externally controlled and translocation can be monitored directly by using  ...[more]

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