PLoS ONE (Jan 2010)

Cholera toxin B subunits assemble into pentamers--proposition of a fly-casting mechanism.

  • Jihad Zrimi,
  • Alicia Ng Ling,
  • Ernawati Giri-Rachman Arifin,
  • Giovanni Feverati,
  • Claire Lesieur

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015347
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 12
p. e15347

Abstract

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The cholera toxin B pentamer (CtxB(5)), which belongs to the AB(5) toxin family, is used as a model study for protein assembly. The effect of the pH on the reassembly of the toxin was investigated using immunochemical, electrophoretic and spectroscopic methods. Three pH-dependent steps were identified during the toxin reassembly: (i) acquisition of a fully assembly-competent fold by the CtxB monomer, (ii) association of CtxB monomer into oligomers, (iii) acquisition of the native fold by the CtxB pentamer. The results show that CtxB(5) and the related heat labile enterotoxin LTB(5) have distinct mechanisms of assembly despite sharing high sequence identity (84%) and almost identical atomic structures. The difference can be pinpointed to four histidines which are spread along the protein sequence and may act together. Thus, most of the toxin B amino acids appear negligible for the assembly, raising the possibility that assembly is driven by a small network of amino acids instead of involving all of them.