The dependence on pH and membrane potential of the pore formed by colicin A and its C-terminal 20 kDa fragment has been measured using planar lipid bilayers. The single channel conductance of the pore formed by both colicin A and the fragment increases with pH with an apparent pK of 6.0. At pH 5.0 the gating by membrane potential of the channels formed by either colicin A or its fragment is identical. At the same pH, quite similar pore properties were found when using the related bacteriocin, colicin E1. In agreement with previous studies, these data indicate that the protein structure containing the lumen of the pore resides in the 20 kDa C-terminal part of the colicin A and favours the recently proposed model, based on protein sequence analysis, which proposes that colicin A, E1 and IB C-terminal domains are folded in the same three-dimensional structure. However, it is also shown that colicin A and not its C-terminal fragment undergoes a pH dependent transition between an "acidic" and a "basic" form of the pore with an apparent pK of 5.3. The two forms of the pore differ by their gating charge but not by the channel size. These results suggest that there is a pH dependent association between the C-terminal domain carrying the lumen of the pore and another domain of the molecule which affect the pore sensitivity to membrane potential.
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