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Rounding Out the Understanding of ACD Toxicity with the Discovery of Cyclic Forms of Actin Oligomers

Actin is an essential element of both innate and adaptive immune systems and can aid in motility and translocation of bacterial pathogens, making it an attractive target for bacterial toxins. Pathogenic Vibrio and Aeromonas genera deliver actin cross-linking domain (ACD) toxin into the cytoplasm of...

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Autores principales: Smith, Harper, Pinkerton, Nick, Heisler, David B., Kudryashova, Elena, Hall, Aaron R., Karch, Kelly R., Norris, Andrew, Wysocki, Vicki, Sotomayor, Marcos, Reisler, Emil, Vavylonis, Dimitrios, Kudryashov, Dmitri S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7828245/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33450834
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms22020718
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author Smith, Harper
Pinkerton, Nick
Heisler, David B.
Kudryashova, Elena
Hall, Aaron R.
Karch, Kelly R.
Norris, Andrew
Wysocki, Vicki
Sotomayor, Marcos
Reisler, Emil
Vavylonis, Dimitrios
Kudryashov, Dmitri S.
author_facet Smith, Harper
Pinkerton, Nick
Heisler, David B.
Kudryashova, Elena
Hall, Aaron R.
Karch, Kelly R.
Norris, Andrew
Wysocki, Vicki
Sotomayor, Marcos
Reisler, Emil
Vavylonis, Dimitrios
Kudryashov, Dmitri S.
author_sort Smith, Harper
collection PubMed
description Actin is an essential element of both innate and adaptive immune systems and can aid in motility and translocation of bacterial pathogens, making it an attractive target for bacterial toxins. Pathogenic Vibrio and Aeromonas genera deliver actin cross-linking domain (ACD) toxin into the cytoplasm of the host cell to poison actin regulation and promptly induce cell rounding. At early stages of toxicity, ACD covalently cross-links actin monomers into oligomers (AOs) that bind through multivalent interactions and potently inhibit several families of actin assembly proteins. At advanced toxicity stages, we found that the terminal protomers of linear AOs can get linked together by ACD to produce cyclic AOs. When tested against formins and Ena/VASP, linear and cyclic AOs exhibit similar inhibitory potential, which for the cyclic AOs is reduced in the presence of profilin. In coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations, profilin and WH2-motif binding sites on actin subunits remain exposed in modeled AOs of both geometries. We speculate, therefore, that the reduced toxicity of cyclic AOs is due to their reduced configurational entropy. A characteristic feature of cyclic AOs is that, in contrast to the linear forms, they cannot be straightened to form filaments (e.g., through stabilization by cofilin), which makes them less susceptible to neutralization by the host cell.
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spelling pubmed-78282452021-01-25 Rounding Out the Understanding of ACD Toxicity with the Discovery of Cyclic Forms of Actin Oligomers Smith, Harper Pinkerton, Nick Heisler, David B. Kudryashova, Elena Hall, Aaron R. Karch, Kelly R. Norris, Andrew Wysocki, Vicki Sotomayor, Marcos Reisler, Emil Vavylonis, Dimitrios Kudryashov, Dmitri S. Int J Mol Sci Article Actin is an essential element of both innate and adaptive immune systems and can aid in motility and translocation of bacterial pathogens, making it an attractive target for bacterial toxins. Pathogenic Vibrio and Aeromonas genera deliver actin cross-linking domain (ACD) toxin into the cytoplasm of the host cell to poison actin regulation and promptly induce cell rounding. At early stages of toxicity, ACD covalently cross-links actin monomers into oligomers (AOs) that bind through multivalent interactions and potently inhibit several families of actin assembly proteins. At advanced toxicity stages, we found that the terminal protomers of linear AOs can get linked together by ACD to produce cyclic AOs. When tested against formins and Ena/VASP, linear and cyclic AOs exhibit similar inhibitory potential, which for the cyclic AOs is reduced in the presence of profilin. In coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations, profilin and WH2-motif binding sites on actin subunits remain exposed in modeled AOs of both geometries. We speculate, therefore, that the reduced toxicity of cyclic AOs is due to their reduced configurational entropy. A characteristic feature of cyclic AOs is that, in contrast to the linear forms, they cannot be straightened to form filaments (e.g., through stabilization by cofilin), which makes them less susceptible to neutralization by the host cell. MDPI 2021-01-13 /pmc/articles/PMC7828245/ /pubmed/33450834 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms22020718 Text en © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Smith, Harper
Pinkerton, Nick
Heisler, David B.
Kudryashova, Elena
Hall, Aaron R.
Karch, Kelly R.
Norris, Andrew
Wysocki, Vicki
Sotomayor, Marcos
Reisler, Emil
Vavylonis, Dimitrios
Kudryashov, Dmitri S.
Rounding Out the Understanding of ACD Toxicity with the Discovery of Cyclic Forms of Actin Oligomers
title Rounding Out the Understanding of ACD Toxicity with the Discovery of Cyclic Forms of Actin Oligomers
title_full Rounding Out the Understanding of ACD Toxicity with the Discovery of Cyclic Forms of Actin Oligomers
title_fullStr Rounding Out the Understanding of ACD Toxicity with the Discovery of Cyclic Forms of Actin Oligomers
title_full_unstemmed Rounding Out the Understanding of ACD Toxicity with the Discovery of Cyclic Forms of Actin Oligomers
title_short Rounding Out the Understanding of ACD Toxicity with the Discovery of Cyclic Forms of Actin Oligomers
title_sort rounding out the understanding of acd toxicity with the discovery of cyclic forms of actin oligomers
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7828245/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33450834
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms22020718
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