4.6 Article

Structure-function analysis of inositol hexakisphosphate-induced autoprocessing of the Vibrio cholerae multifunctional autoprocessing RTX toxin

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 283, Issue 35, Pages 23656-23664

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M803334200

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIAID NIH HHS [R01 AI 051490, U54 AI 057153, R01 AI051490-06A1, R01 AI051490] Funding Source: Medline

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Vibrio cholerae secretes a large virulence-associated multifunctional autoprocessing RTX toxin ( MARTXVc). Autoprocessing of this toxin by an embedded cysteine protease domain (CPD) is essential for this toxin to induce actin depolymerization in a broad range of cell types. A homologous CPD is also present in the large clostridial toxin TcdB and recent studies showed that inositol hexakisphosphate (Ins(1,2,3,4,5,6) P6 or InsP6) stimulated the autoprocessing of TcdB dependent upon the CPD ( Egerer, M., Giesemann, T., Jank, T., Satchell, K. J., and Aktories, K. (2007) J. Biol. Chem. 282, 25314-25321). In this work, the autoprocessing activity of the CPD within MARTXVc is similarly found to be inducible by InsP6. The CPD is shown to bind InsP6 ( Kd, 0.6 mu M), and InsP6 is shown to stimulate intramolecular autoprocessing at both physiological concentrations and as low as 0.01 mu M. Processed CPD did not bind InsP6 indicating that, subsequent to cleavage, the activated CPD may shift to an inactive conformation. To further pursue the mechanism of autoprocessing, conserved residues among 24 identified CPDs were mutagenized. In addition to cysteine and histidine residues that form the catalytic site, 2 lysine residues essential for InsP6 binding and 5 lysine and arginine residues resulting in loss of activity at low InsP6 concentrations were identified. Overall, our data support a model in which basic residues located across the CPD structure form an InsP6 binding pocket and that the binding of InsP6 stimulates processing by altering the CPD to an activated conformation. After processing, InsP6 is shown to be recycled, while the cleaved CPD becomes incapable of further binding of InsP6.

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