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J. Bacteriol., Jun 1995, 3128-3132, Vol 177, No. 11
C Jemal, JE Haddad, D Begum and MP Jackson
Shiga toxin (STX), a bacterial toxin produced by Shigella dysenteriae type
1, is a hexamer composed of five receptor-binding B subunits which encircle
an alpha-helix at the carboxyl terminus of the enzymatic A polypeptide.
Hybrid toxins constructed by fusing the A polypeptide sequences of STX and
Shiga-like toxin type II were used to confirm that the carboxyl terminus of
the A subunits governs association with the B pentamers. The alpha-helix of
the 293-amino-acid STX A subunit contains nine residues (serine 279 to
methionine 287) which penetrate the nonpolar pore of the B-subunit
pentamer. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to establish the involvement
of two residues bordering this alpha- helix, aspartic acid 278 and arginine
288, in coupling the C terminus of StxA to the B pentamer. Amino acid
substitutions at StxB residues arginine 33 and tryptophan 34, which are on
the membrane-contacting surface of the pentamer, reduced cytotoxicity
without affecting holotoxin formation. Although these B-subunit mutations
did not involve receptor-binding residues, they may have induced an
electrostatic repulsion between the holotoxin and the mammalian cell
membrane or disrupted cytoplasmic translocation.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Analysis of Shiga toxin subunit association by using hybrid A polypeptides and site-specific mutagenesis
Department of Immunology and Microbiology, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, Michigan 48201, USA.
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