Anderluh G, Barlic A, Podlesek Z, Macek P, Pungercar J, Gubensek F, Zecchini M L, Serra M D, Menestrina G
Department of Biology, Biotechnical Faculty, University of Lijubljana, Slovenia.
Eur J Biochem. 1999 Jul;263(1):128-36. doi: 10.1046/j.1432-1327.1999.00477.x.
Equinatoxin II is a cysteineless pore-forming protein from the sea anemone Actinia equina. It readily creates pores in membranes containing sphingomyelin. Its topology when bound in lipid membranes has been studied using cysteine-scanning mutagenesis. At approximately every tenth residue, a cysteine was introduced. Nineteen single cysteine mutants were produced in Escherichia coli and purified. The accessibility of the thiol groups in lipid-embedded cysteine mutants was studied by reaction with biotin maleimide. Most of the mutants were modified, except those with cysteines at positions 105 and 114. Mutants R144C and S160C were modified only at high concentrations of the probe. Similar results were obtained if membrane-bound biotinylated mutants were tested for avidin binding, but in this case three more mutants gave a negative result: S1C, S13C and K43C. Furthermore, mutants S1C, S13C, K20C, K43C and S95C reacted with biotin only after insertion into the lipid, suggesting that they were involved in major conformational changes occurring upon membrane binding. These results were further confirmed by labeling the mutants with acrylodan, a polarity-sensitive fluorescent probe. When labeled mutants were combined with vesicles, the following mutants exhibited blue-shifts, indicating the transfer of acrylodan into a hydrophobic environment: S13C, K20C, S105C, S114C, R120C, R144C and S160C. The overall results suggest that at least two regions are embedded within the lipid membrane: the N-terminal 13-20 region, probably forming an amphiphilic helix, and the tryptophan-rich 105-120 region. Arg144, Ser160 and residues nearby could be involved in making contacts with lipid headgroups. The association with the membrane appears to be unique and different from that of bacterial pore-forming proteins and therefore equinatoxin II may serve as a model for eukaryotic channel-forming toxins.
海葵毒素II是一种来自海葵(Actinia equina)的无半胱氨酸的成孔蛋白。它能轻易地在含有鞘磷脂的膜上形成孔道。利用半胱氨酸扫描诱变技术研究了其与脂质膜结合时的拓扑结构。大约每隔十个残基引入一个半胱氨酸。在大肠杆菌中产生了19个单半胱氨酸突变体并进行了纯化。通过与生物素马来酰亚胺反应研究了脂质包埋的半胱氨酸突变体中硫醇基团的可及性。除了在第105和114位带有半胱氨酸的突变体外,大多数突变体都被修饰了。突变体R144C和S160C仅在高浓度探针下被修饰。如果测试膜结合的生物素化突变体与抗生物素蛋白的结合,也会得到类似的结果,但在这种情况下,又有三个突变体给出了阴性结果:S1C、S13C和K43C。此外,突变体S1C、S13C、K20C、K43C和S95C仅在插入脂质后才与生物素反应,这表明它们参与了膜结合时发生的主要构象变化。用极性敏感荧光探针丙烯罗丹标记突变体进一步证实了这些结果。当标记的突变体与囊泡结合时,以下突变体出现蓝移,表明丙烯罗丹转移到了疏水环境中:S13C、K20C、S105C、S114C、R120C、R144C和S160C。总体结果表明,至少有两个区域嵌入脂质膜内:N端的13 - 20区域,可能形成两亲性螺旋,以及富含色氨酸的105 - 120区域。Arg144、Ser160及其附近的残基可能参与与脂质头部基团的接触。与膜的结合似乎是独特的,不同于细菌成孔蛋白,因此海葵毒素II可作为真核通道形成毒素的模型。