Aerolysin

Aerolysin

proaerolysin
Identifiers
Symbol Aerolysin
Pfam PF01117
Pfam clan CL0345
InterPro IPR005830
PROSITE PDOC00247
SCOP 1pre
SUPERFAMILY 1pre
TCDB 1.C.4
OPM superfamily 35

In molecular biology, aerolysin is a cytolytic pore-forming toxin exported by Aeromonas hydrophila, a Gram-negative bacterium associated with diarrhoeal diseases and deep wound infections.[1][2] The mature toxin binds to eukaryotic cells and aggregates to form holes (approximately 3 nm in diameter) leading to the destruction of the membrane permeability barrier and osmotic lysis. The structure of proaerolysin has been determined to 2.8A resolution and shows the protoxin to adopt a novel fold.[2] Images of an aerolysin oligomer derived from electron microscopy and molecular dynamics simulations have helped to construct a model of the protein in its heptameric conformation, and to outline a mechanism by which this assembly might insert into lipid bilayers to form ion channels.[3]

References

  1. Howard SP, Garland WJ, Green MJ, Buckley JT (June 1987). "Nucleotide sequence of the gene for the hole-forming toxin aerolysin of Aeromonas hydrophila". J. Bacteriol. 169 (6): 2869–71. PMC 212202Freely accessible. PMID 3584074.
  2. 1 2 Parker MW, Buckley JT, Postma JP, Tucker AD, Leonard K, Pattus F, Tsernoglou D (January 1994). "Structure of the Aeromonas toxin proaerolysin in its water-soluble and membrane-channel states". Nature. 367 (6460): 292–5. PMID 7510043. doi:10.1038/367292a0.
  3. Degiacomi MT, Iacovache I, Pernot L, Chami M, Kudryashev M, Stahlberg H, van der Goot FG, Dal Peraro M (August 2013). "Molecular assembly of the aerolysin pore reveals a swirling membrane-insertion mechanism. The gene for aerolysin have been shown to undergo Horizontal gene transfer from prokaryotes to eukaryotes.". Nature Chemical Biology. 9 (6460): 623–629. PMID 23912165. doi:10.1038/nchembio.1312.

This article incorporates text from the public domain Pfam and InterPro IPR005830

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.