4v3n
From Proteopedia
Membrane bound pleurotolysin prepore (TMH2 strand lock) trapped with engineered disulphide cross-link
Structural highlights
FunctionPublication Abstract from PubMedMembrane attack complex/perforin-like (MACPF) proteins comprise the largest superfamily of pore-forming proteins, playing crucial roles in immunity and pathogenesis. Soluble monomers assemble into large transmembrane pores via conformational transitions that remain to be structurally and mechanistically characterised. Here we present an 11 A resolution cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) structure of the two-part, fungal toxin Pleurotolysin (Ply), together with crystal structures of both components (the lipid binding PlyA protein and the pore-forming MACPF component PlyB). These data reveal a 13-fold pore 80 A in diameter and 100 A in height, with each subunit comprised of a PlyB molecule atop a membrane bound dimer of PlyA. The resolution of the EM map, together with biophysical and computational experiments, allowed confident assignment of subdomains in a MACPF pore assembly. The major conformational changes in PlyB are a approximately 70 degrees opening of the bent and distorted central beta-sheet of the MACPF domain, accompanied by extrusion and refolding of two alpha-helical regions into transmembrane beta-hairpins (TMH1 and TMH2). We determined the structures of three different disulphide bond-trapped prepore intermediates. Analysis of these data by molecular modelling and flexible fitting allows us to generate a potential trajectory of beta-sheet unbending. The results suggest that MACPF conformational change is triggered through disruption of the interface between a conserved helix-turn-helix motif and the top of TMH2. Following their release we propose that the transmembrane regions assemble into beta-hairpins via top down zippering of backbone hydrogen bonds to form the membrane-inserted beta-barrel. The intermediate structures of the MACPF domain during refolding into the beta-barrel pore establish a structural paradigm for the transition from soluble monomer to pore, which may be conserved across the whole superfamily. The TMH2 region is critical for the release of both TMH clusters, suggesting why this region is targeted by endogenous inhibitors of MACPF function. Conformational Changes during Pore Formation by the Perforin-Related Protein Pleurotolysin.,Lukoyanova N, Kondos SC, Farabella I, Law RH, Reboul CF, Caradoc-Davies TT, Spicer BA, Kleifeld O, Traore DA, Ekkel SM, Voskoboinik I, Trapani JA, Hatfaludi T, Oliver K, Hotze EM, Tweten RK, Whisstock JC, Topf M, Saibil HR, Dunstone MA PLoS Biol. 2015 Feb 5;13(2):e1002049. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1002049., eCollection 2015 Feb. PMID:25654333[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. See AlsoReferences
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Categories: Large Structures | Pleurotus ostreatus | Caradoc-Davies TT | Dunstone MA | Ekkel S | Farabella I | Hatfaludi T | Hotze EM | Kleifeld O | Kondos SC | Law RHP | Lukoyanova N | Oliver K | Perugini M | Reboul CF | Saibil HR | Spicer BA | Topf M | Tweten RK | Whisstock JC