PA(63), the active 63 kDa form of anthrax protective antigen, forms a heptameric ring-shaped oligomer that is believed to represent a precursor of the membrane pore formed by this protein. When maintained at pH >/=8.0, this "prepore" dissociated to monomeric subunits upon treatment with SDS at room temperature, but treatment at pH =7 (or with beta-octylglucoside at pH 8.0) caused it to convert to an SDS-resistant pore-like form. Transition to this form involved major changes in the conformation of loop 2 of domain 2 (D2L2), as evidenced by (i) occlusion of a chymotrypsin site within D2L2 and (ii) excimer formation by pyrene groups linked to N306C within this loop. The pore-like form retained the capacity to bind anthrax toxin A moieties and cell surface receptors, but was unable to form pores in membranes or mediate translocation. Mutant PA(63) in which D2L2 had been deleted was inactive in pore formation and translocation but, like the prepore, was capable of forming heptamers that converted to an SDS-resistant form under acidic conditions. Our findings support a model of pore formation in which the D2L2 loops move to the membrane-proximal face of the heptamer and interact to form a 14-strand transmembrane beta-barrel. Concomitantly, domain 2 undergoes a major conformational rearrangement, independent of D2L2, that renders the heptamer resistant to dissociation by SDS. These results provide a basis for further exploration of the role of PA(63) in translocation of anthrax toxin's enzymic moieties across membranes.
Bacillus anthracis secretes three proteins, which associate in binary combinations to form toxic complexes at the surface of mammalian cells. Receptor-bound protective antigen (PA) is proteolytically activated, yielding a 63 kDa fragment (PA(63)). PA(63) oligomerizes into heptamers, which bind edema factor (EF) or lethal factor (LF) to form the toxic complexes. We undertook a quantitative analysis of the interactions of EF with PA(63) by means of surface plasmon resonance (SPR) measurements. Heptameric PA(63) was covalently bound by amine coupling to an SPR chip, or noncovalently bound via a C-terminal hexahistidine tag on the protein to Ni(2+)nitrilotriacetate groups on the chip. Values of k(on) and k(off) for EF at 23 degrees C were approximately 3 x 10(5) M(-)(1) s(-)(1) and (3-5) x 10(-)(4) s(-)(1), respectively, giving a calculated K(d) of (1-2) x 10(-)(9) M. A similar value of K(d) (7 x 10(-)(10) M) was obtained when we measured the binding of radiolabeled EF to receptor-bound PA(63) on the surface of L6 cells (at 4 degrees C). Each of these analyses was also performed with LF and LF(N) (the N-terminal 255 residues of LF), and values obtained were comparable to those for EF. The similarity in the dissociation constants determined by SPR and by measurements on the cell surface suggests that the presence of the receptor does not play a large role in the interaction between PA(63) and EF/LF.
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