4.7 Article

How Botulinum Neurotoxin Light Chain A1 Maintains Stable Association with the Intracellular Neuronal Plasma Membrane

Journal

TOXINS
Volume 14, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/toxins14120814

Keywords

botulinum toxin; bacterial toxins; SNAP-25; intracellular trafficking; protein modeling

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study reveals that the potency of Botulinum neurotoxin serotype A is related to its stable co-localization on the plasma membrane. By exploring the structural elements, it is found that specific regions, termed MLD, R1, and R2, play independent roles in directing the co-localization of LC/A1 with SNAP-25. This research contributes to the understanding of the molecular basis of the high potency of BoNT/A1.
Botulinum neurotoxin serotype A (BoNT/A) is the most potent protein toxin for humans and is utilized as a therapy for numerous neurologic diseases. BoNT/A comprises a catalytic Light Chain (LC/A) and a Heavy Chain (HC/A) and includes eight subtypes (BoNT/A1-/A8). Previously we showed BoNT/A potency positively correlated with stable localization on the intracellular plasma membrane and identified a low homology domain (amino acids 268-357) responsible for LC/A1 stable co-localization with SNAP-25 on the plasma membrane, while LC/A3 was present in the cytosol of Neuro2A cells. In the present study, steady-state- and live-imaging of a cytosolic LC/A3 derivative (LC/A3V) engineered to contain individual structural elements of the A1 LDH showed that a 59 amino acid region (275-334) termed the MLD was sufficient to direct LC/A3V from the cytosol to the plasma membrane co-localized with SNAP-25. Informatics and experimental validation of the MLD-predicted R1 region (an alpha-helix, residues 275-300) and R2 region (a loop, alpha-helix, loop, residues 302-334) both contribute independent steps to the stable co-localization of LC/A1 with SNAP-25 on the plasma membrane of Neuro-2A cells. Understanding how these structural elements contribute to the overall association of LC/A1 on the plasma membrane may identify the molecular basis for the LC contribution of BoNT/A1 to high potency.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available