4.5 Article

Protein disulphide-isomerase reduces ricin to its A and B chains in the endoplasmic reticulum

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 383, Issue -, Pages 285-293

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/BJ20040742

Keywords

encloplasmic reticulum-associated protein degradation (ERAD); oxidoreductase; protein disulphide-isomerase; retrograde transport; ricin; toxin

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Cells expressing ricin B chain within the secretory pathway are significantly more resistant to intoxication by ricin holotoxin but not to other cytotoxins that exploit similar endocytic routes to the cytosol. Furthermore, cells expressing the related B chain of abrin are protected against both incoming abrin and ricin. These phenotypes can be correlated with the abilities of the respective B chains to form disulphide-linked A-B holotoxins, since abrin B chain forms heterodimers with either abrin or ricin A chains, whereas ricin B chain forms heterodimers with ricin A chain only. In the ricin B-expressing cells, this newly made lectin disappears with biphasic kinetics comprising a retention phase followed by slow turnover and disposal after disengagement from calnexin cycle components. Interference with ricin cytotoxicity occurs during the early retention phase when ricin B chain is associated with PDI (protein disulphide-isomerase). The data show that retrotranslocation of incoming toxin is impeded by PDI-catalysed formation of heterodimers between endogenous B and A chains derived from reduced holotoxin, thus proving that reduction of ricin occurs in the endoplasmic reticulum. In contrast with other toxins, ricin does not appear to require either proteolyfic cleavage or unfolding for PDI-catalysed reduction.

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