Cargando…

The antibacterial toxin colicin N binds to the inner core of lipopolysaccharide and close to its translocator protein

Colicins are a diverse family of large antibacterial protein toxins, secreted by and active against Escherichia coli and must cross their target cell's outer membrane barrier to kill. To achieve this, most colicins require an abundant porin (e.g. OmpF) plus a low‐copy‐number, high‐affinity, out...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Johnson, Christopher L., Ridley, Helen, Marchetti, Roberta, Silipo, Alba, Griffin, David C., Crawford, Lucy, Bonev, Boyan, Molinaro, Antonio, Lakey, Jeremy H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Blackwell Scientific Publications 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4114557/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24589252
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mmi.12568
_version_ 1782328451202547712
author Johnson, Christopher L.
Ridley, Helen
Marchetti, Roberta
Silipo, Alba
Griffin, David C.
Crawford, Lucy
Bonev, Boyan
Molinaro, Antonio
Lakey, Jeremy H.
author_facet Johnson, Christopher L.
Ridley, Helen
Marchetti, Roberta
Silipo, Alba
Griffin, David C.
Crawford, Lucy
Bonev, Boyan
Molinaro, Antonio
Lakey, Jeremy H.
author_sort Johnson, Christopher L.
collection PubMed
description Colicins are a diverse family of large antibacterial protein toxins, secreted by and active against Escherichia coli and must cross their target cell's outer membrane barrier to kill. To achieve this, most colicins require an abundant porin (e.g. OmpF) plus a low‐copy‐number, high‐affinity, outer membrane protein receptor (e.g. BtuB). Recently, genetic screens have suggested that colicin N (ColN), which has no high‐affinity receptor, targets highly abundant lipopolysaccharide (LPS) instead. Here we reveal the details of this interaction and demonstrate that the ColN receptor‐binding domain (ColN‐R) binds to a specific region of LPS close to the membrane surface. Data from in vitro studies using calorimetry and both liquid‐ and solid‐state NMR reveal the interactions behind the in vivo requirement for a defined oligosaccharide region of LPS. Delipidated LPS (LPS(Δ)(LIPID)) shows weaker binding; and thus full affinity requires the lipid component. The site of LPS binding means that ColN will preferably bind at the interface and thus position itself close to the surface of its translocon component, OmpF. ColN is, currently, unique among colicins in requiring LPS and, combined with previous data, this implies that the ColN translocon is distinct from those of other known colicins.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4114557
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2014
publisher Blackwell Scientific Publications
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-41145572014-09-08 The antibacterial toxin colicin N binds to the inner core of lipopolysaccharide and close to its translocator protein Johnson, Christopher L. Ridley, Helen Marchetti, Roberta Silipo, Alba Griffin, David C. Crawford, Lucy Bonev, Boyan Molinaro, Antonio Lakey, Jeremy H. Mol Microbiol Research Articles Colicins are a diverse family of large antibacterial protein toxins, secreted by and active against Escherichia coli and must cross their target cell's outer membrane barrier to kill. To achieve this, most colicins require an abundant porin (e.g. OmpF) plus a low‐copy‐number, high‐affinity, outer membrane protein receptor (e.g. BtuB). Recently, genetic screens have suggested that colicin N (ColN), which has no high‐affinity receptor, targets highly abundant lipopolysaccharide (LPS) instead. Here we reveal the details of this interaction and demonstrate that the ColN receptor‐binding domain (ColN‐R) binds to a specific region of LPS close to the membrane surface. Data from in vitro studies using calorimetry and both liquid‐ and solid‐state NMR reveal the interactions behind the in vivo requirement for a defined oligosaccharide region of LPS. Delipidated LPS (LPS(Δ)(LIPID)) shows weaker binding; and thus full affinity requires the lipid component. The site of LPS binding means that ColN will preferably bind at the interface and thus position itself close to the surface of its translocon component, OmpF. ColN is, currently, unique among colicins in requiring LPS and, combined with previous data, this implies that the ColN translocon is distinct from those of other known colicins. Blackwell Scientific Publications 2014-03-28 2014-05 /pmc/articles/PMC4114557/ /pubmed/24589252 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mmi.12568 Text en © 2014 The Authors. Molecular Microbiology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Johnson, Christopher L.
Ridley, Helen
Marchetti, Roberta
Silipo, Alba
Griffin, David C.
Crawford, Lucy
Bonev, Boyan
Molinaro, Antonio
Lakey, Jeremy H.
The antibacterial toxin colicin N binds to the inner core of lipopolysaccharide and close to its translocator protein
title The antibacterial toxin colicin N binds to the inner core of lipopolysaccharide and close to its translocator protein
title_full The antibacterial toxin colicin N binds to the inner core of lipopolysaccharide and close to its translocator protein
title_fullStr The antibacterial toxin colicin N binds to the inner core of lipopolysaccharide and close to its translocator protein
title_full_unstemmed The antibacterial toxin colicin N binds to the inner core of lipopolysaccharide and close to its translocator protein
title_short The antibacterial toxin colicin N binds to the inner core of lipopolysaccharide and close to its translocator protein
title_sort antibacterial toxin colicin n binds to the inner core of lipopolysaccharide and close to its translocator protein
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4114557/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24589252
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mmi.12568
work_keys_str_mv AT johnsonchristopherl theantibacterialtoxincolicinnbindstotheinnercoreoflipopolysaccharideandclosetoitstranslocatorprotein
AT ridleyhelen theantibacterialtoxincolicinnbindstotheinnercoreoflipopolysaccharideandclosetoitstranslocatorprotein
AT marchettiroberta theantibacterialtoxincolicinnbindstotheinnercoreoflipopolysaccharideandclosetoitstranslocatorprotein
AT silipoalba theantibacterialtoxincolicinnbindstotheinnercoreoflipopolysaccharideandclosetoitstranslocatorprotein
AT griffindavidc theantibacterialtoxincolicinnbindstotheinnercoreoflipopolysaccharideandclosetoitstranslocatorprotein
AT crawfordlucy theantibacterialtoxincolicinnbindstotheinnercoreoflipopolysaccharideandclosetoitstranslocatorprotein
AT bonevboyan theantibacterialtoxincolicinnbindstotheinnercoreoflipopolysaccharideandclosetoitstranslocatorprotein
AT molinaroantonio theantibacterialtoxincolicinnbindstotheinnercoreoflipopolysaccharideandclosetoitstranslocatorprotein
AT lakeyjeremyh theantibacterialtoxincolicinnbindstotheinnercoreoflipopolysaccharideandclosetoitstranslocatorprotein
AT johnsonchristopherl antibacterialtoxincolicinnbindstotheinnercoreoflipopolysaccharideandclosetoitstranslocatorprotein
AT ridleyhelen antibacterialtoxincolicinnbindstotheinnercoreoflipopolysaccharideandclosetoitstranslocatorprotein
AT marchettiroberta antibacterialtoxincolicinnbindstotheinnercoreoflipopolysaccharideandclosetoitstranslocatorprotein
AT silipoalba antibacterialtoxincolicinnbindstotheinnercoreoflipopolysaccharideandclosetoitstranslocatorprotein
AT griffindavidc antibacterialtoxincolicinnbindstotheinnercoreoflipopolysaccharideandclosetoitstranslocatorprotein
AT crawfordlucy antibacterialtoxincolicinnbindstotheinnercoreoflipopolysaccharideandclosetoitstranslocatorprotein
AT bonevboyan antibacterialtoxincolicinnbindstotheinnercoreoflipopolysaccharideandclosetoitstranslocatorprotein
AT molinaroantonio antibacterialtoxincolicinnbindstotheinnercoreoflipopolysaccharideandclosetoitstranslocatorprotein
AT lakeyjeremyh antibacterialtoxincolicinnbindstotheinnercoreoflipopolysaccharideandclosetoitstranslocatorprotein