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The "pH-A c tivated Trigger" Mechanism of Colicin E1 Channel Domain. Abdi Musse MSc. Final Examination. Supervisor Dr. A. R . Merrill. Advisory committee Dr. G. Harauz Dr. F. J. Sharom. Outline. Introduction Research Objectives Results and Discussion Summary and Conclusions.
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The "pH-Activated Trigger" Mechanism of Colicin E1 Channel Domain Abdi Musse MSc. Final Examination Supervisor Dr. A. R. Merrill Advisory committee Dr. G. Harauz Dr. F. J. Sharom
Outline • Introduction • Research Objectives • Results and Discussion • Summary and Conclusions
Overview • The Biology of Pore-forming Colicins • Antimicrobial proteins that are secreted by Escherichia coli • Targets the cytoplasmic membrane • Forms lethaly depolarizing ion channels • Dissipations of the cationic gradients (H+, K+, Na+) Colicin E1
T R C H2N COOH R T C Colicin Ia Wiener et al. (1997) Structure and Function Tol Network (TolC, A and Q) BtuB Receptor Channel-forming
Elkins et al. (1997) The Channel Domain H4 H6 H7 H5 H8 H9 H3 H1 H10 H2 • 2.5 Å Structure of P190 • Three- layered sandwich structure
Interactions with Membranes Activated-intermediate Membrane-anchored Precursor
Formations of the Open Channel The precursor Voltage-gated • The open channel • Monomer • 4 – 9 Ådiameter
Mechanism of Activation • Acid-induced activation is common to most toxins • Onset of Protein unfolding • Increased structural flexibility • Potentiates the massive unfloding events requisite for membrane insertion and channel formation
H4 H5a Merrill et al. (1997) The pH-Activated Trigger Hypothesis • The trigger motif: helices 4 and 5a • Activating helix-to-coil transition of the trigger motif • Disruption of the critical H-bonds formed by D-408, D-410 and D-423
The Research Objectives • Purpose • To test the proposed pH-activated trigger mechanism • Approaches • Replacements of the critical acidic residues with serine • Incorporation of a disulphide bond within the trigger motif • Tools • Membrane binding • Insertion kinetics • Channel activity • Structural elucidations
Mutant Proteins of Colicin E1 • Asp Ser • D410S • D408S • D408S/D410S D408S/D423S D410S/D423S • D408S/D410S/D423S • Ala Cys • A407C/A411C • Single Trp • F413W • F413W/D408S/D423S
WT (folded) WT (7 M GnHCl) Structural Integrity
Probing Free Sulfahydral Side-chains in A407C/A411C with MIANS Non-fluorescent
Presence of a Disulfide Bond in A407C/A411C Channel Peptide MIANS fluorescence Stoichiometry of MIANS Conjugation WT (GnHCl) A407C/A411C (GnHCl) WT (folded) A407C/A411C (folded)
TNP TNP TNP TNP Fluorescence Quenching Membrane Binding
pKa 4 Typical Binding Profile for the WT Channel Peptide
b c The Expected Profile for the Disulphide Bonded Mutant
The Binding Profile for the WT protein • Expected pH-binding profile • The effective pKa 4.1 (0.1)
The Binding Profiles of the Double AspSer Mutants • Alkaline-directed shift in binding profile • Consistent with the predicted profile of an altered trigger mechanism
A407C/A411C The Binding Profiles of the Disulphide Bonded Mutant • Un-expected binding profile • At pH 4.5: Ka = 1.4 (0.2) mM-1 (reduced) • 1.7 (0.3) mM-1 (oxidized)
Fluorescence Quenching Membrane Insertion
D410 D408 H-bond Salt bridge Apparent Rates of Membrane Insertion
In vitro Channel Activity Cl- Cl- Cl- Fluorescence Dequenching Efflux
W-424 W-413
The Time-resolved and Steady-state Fluorescence of the Single Trp Mutants
Possible Implications for the in vivo Mechanism of Activation H1 H1 Trigger Docking site
Summary and Conclusions • These observations confirm the proposed pH-activated trigger mechanism of colicin E1 • Asp Ser mutations disrupted criticall H-bonds within the tirgger motif • Elevated binding, insertion, and channel activities at near-neutral pH • Shift in the helix-to-coil transition of the trigger motif toward random Coil-like conformational state for helix 4
Colleagues in the Merrill Laboratory Tanya Brodeur Susan Yates Tania Roberts Gerry Prentice* Dave Teal Zahir Hussein Acknowledgements Advisor Dr. A. R. Merrill • Advisory Committee • Dr. G. Harauz • Dr. F. J. Sharom Examining Committee Dr. G. Harauz Dr. P. D. Josephy Dr. M. Palmer *Special thanks