4.6 Review

Epsilon toxin: a fascinating pore-forming toxin

Journal

FEBS JOURNAL
Volume 278, Issue 23, Pages 4602-4615

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1742-4658.2011.08145.x

Keywords

aerolysin; Clostridium perfringens; Clostridium septicum alpha toxin; enterotoxemia; epsilon toxin; glutamate; lipid bilayer; necrosis; pore; pore-forming toxin

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Epsilon toxin (ETX) is produced by strains of Clostridium perfringens classified as type B or type D. ETX belongs to the heptameric beta-pore-forming toxins including aerolysin and Clostridium septicum alpha toxin, which are characterized by the formation of a pore through the plasma membrane of eukaryotic cells consisting in a beta-barrel of 14 amphipatic beta strands. By contrast to aerolysin and C. septicum alpha toxin, ETX is a much more potent toxin and is responsible for enterotoxemia in animals, mainly sheep. ETX induces perivascular edema in various tissues and accumulates in particular in the kidneys and brain, where it causes edema and necrotic lesions. ETX is able to pass through the bloodbrain barrier and stimulate the release of glutamate, which accounts for the symptoms of nervous excitation observed in animal enterotoxemia. At the cellular level, ETX causes rapid swelling followed by cell death involving necrosis. The precise mode of action of ETX remains to be determined. ETX is a powerful toxin, however, it also represents a unique tool with which to vehicle drugs into the central nervous system or target glutamatergic neurons.

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