The genome of Weissella oryzae SG25T was recently sequenced and a botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT) like gene was identified by bioinformatics methods. The typical three-domains organization of BoNTs with a N-terminal metalloprotease domain, a translocation and a cell binding domains could be identified. The BoNT family of neurotoxins is rapidly growing, but this was the first indication of the possible expression of a BoNT toxin outside the Clostridium genus. We performed molecular modeling and dynamics simulations showing that the 50 kDa N-terminal domain folds very similarly to the metalloprotease domain of BoNT/B, whilst the binding part is different. However, neither the recombinant metalloprotease nor the binding domains showed cross-reactivity with the standard antisera that define the seven serotypes of BoNTs. We found that the purified Weissella metalloprotease cleaves VAMP at a single site untouched by the other VAMP-specific BoNTs. This site is a unique Trp-Trp peptide bond located within the juxtamembrane segment of VAMP which is essential for neurotransmitter release. Therefore, the present study identifies the first non-Clostridial BoNT-like metalloprotease that cleaves VAMP at a novel and relevant site and we propose to label it BoNT/Wo.
Tetanus and botulinum neurotoxins are produced by anaerobic bacteria of the genus Clostridium and are the most poisonous toxins known, with 50% mouse lethal dose comprised within the range of 0.1-few nanograms per Kg, depending on the individual toxin. Botulinum neurotoxins are similarly toxic to humans and can therefore be considered for potential use in bioterrorism. At the same time, their neurospecificity and reversibility of action make them excellent therapeutics for a growing and heterogeneous number of human diseases that are characterized by a hyperactivity of peripheral nerve terminals. The complete crystallographic structure is available for some botulinum toxins, and reveals that they consist of four domains functionally related to the four steps of their mechanism of neuron intoxication: 1) binding to specific receptors of the presynaptic membrane; 2) internalization via endocytic vesicles; 3) translocation across the membrane of endocytic vesicles into the neuronal cytosol; 4) catalytic activity of the enzymatic moiety directed towards the SNARE proteins. Despite the many advances in understanding the structure-mechanism relationship of tetanus and botulinum neurotoxins, the molecular events involved in the translocation step have been only partially elucidated. Here we will review recent advances that have provided relevant insights on the process and discuss possible models that can be experimentally tested. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Pore-Forming Toxins edited by Mauro Dalla Serra and Franco Gambale.
Diphtheria toxin (DT), the etiological agent of the homonymous disease, like other bacterial toxins, has to undergo a dramatic structural change in order to be internalized into the cytosol, where it finally performs its function. The molecular mechanism of toxin transit across the membrane is not well known, but the available experimental evidence indicates that one of the three domains of the toxin, called the central a-helical domain, inserts into the lipid bilayer, so favoring the translocation of the catalytic domain. This process is driven by the acidic pH of the endosomal lumen. Here, we describe the crystal structure of DT grown at acidic pH in the presence of bicelles. We were unable to freeze the moment of DT insertion into the lipid bilayer, but our crystal structure indicates that the low pH causes the unfolding of the TH2, TH3 and TH4 a-helices. This event gives rise to the exposure of a hydrophobic surface that includes the TH5 and TH8 a-helices, and the loop region connecting the TH8 and TH9 a-helices. Their exposure is probably favored by the presence of lipid bilayers in the crystallization solution, and they appear to be ready to insert into the membrane. DatabaseCoordinates and structure factors have been deposited in the Protein Data Bank under accession number 4OW6.
Botulinum neurotoxins (BoNTs) form a large class of potent and deadly neurotoxins. Given their growing number, it is of paramount importance to discover novel inhibitors targeting common steps of their intoxication process. Recently, EGA was shown to inhibit the action of bacterial toxins and viruses exhibiting a pH-dependent translocation step in mammalian cells, by interfering with their entry route. As BoNTs act in the cytosol of nerve terminals, the entry into an appropriate compartment wherefrom they translocate the catalytic moiety is essential for toxicity. Herein we propose an optimized procedure to synthesize EGA and we show that, in vitro, it prevents the neurotoxicity of different BoNT serotypes by interfering with their trafficking. Furthermore, in mice, EGA mitigates botulism symptoms induced by BoNT/A and significantly decreases the lethality of BoNT/B and BoNT/D. This opens the possibility of using EGA as a lead compound to develop novel inhibitors of botulinum neurotoxins.
Botulinum and tetanus neurotoxins are the most toxic substances known and form the growing family of clostridial neurotoxins. They are composed of a metalloprotease light chain (L), linked via a disulfide bond to a heavy chain (H). H mediates the binding to nerve terminals and the membrane translocation of L into the cytosol where their substrates, the three SNARE proteins, are localised. L translocation is accompanied by unfolding, and it has to be reduced and reacquire the native fold to exert its neurotoxicity. The Thioredoxin reductase-Thioredoxin system is responsible for the reduction, but it is unknown whether the refolding of L is spontaneous or aided by host chaperones. Here we report that geldanamycin, a specific inhibitor of heat shock protein 90, hampers the refolding of L after membrane translocation and completely prevents the cleavage of SNAREs. We also found that geldanamycin strongly synergises with PX-12, an inhibitor of thioredoxin, suggesting that the processes of L chain refolding and interchain disulfide reduction are strictly coupled. Indeed we found that the heat shock protein 90 and the Thioredoxin reductase-Thioredoxin system physically interact on synaptic vesicle where they orchestrate a chaperone-redox machinery which is exploited by clostridial neurotoxins to deliver their catalytic part into the cytosol.
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