When diphtheria toxin encounters a low pH environment, the channel-forming T domain undergoes a poorly understood conformational change that allows for both its own membrane insertion and the translocation of the toxin's catalytic domain across the membrane. From the crystallographic structure of the water-soluble form of diphtheria toxin, a “double dagger” model was proposed in which two transmembrane helical hairpins, TH5-7 and TH8-9, anchor the T domain in the membrane. In this paper, we report the topography of the T domain in the open channel state. This topography was derived from experiments in which either a hexahistidine (H6) tag or biotin moiety was attached at residues that were mutated to cysteines. From the sign of the voltage gating induced by the H6 tag and the accessibility of the biotinylated residues to streptavidin added to the cis or trans side of the membrane, we determined which segments of the T domain are on the cis or trans side of the membrane and, consequently, which segments span the membrane. We find that there are three membrane-spanning segments. Two of them are in the channel-forming piece of the T domain, near its carboxy terminal end, and correspond to one of the proposed “daggers,” TH8-9. The other membrane-spanning segment roughly corresponds to only TH5 of the TH5-7 dagger, with the rest of that region lying on or near the cis surface. We also find that, in association with channel formation, the amino terminal third of the T domain, a hydrophilic stretch of ∼70 residues, is translocated across the membrane to the trans side.
Topography of Diphtheria Toxin's T Domain in the Open Channel State
Lisa Senzel and Michael Gordon contributed equally to this work and should be considered co–first authors.
An impure preparation of synthetic H6 peptide was used in these experiments. Subsequent HPLC fractionation revealed that peptide containing the NH2-terminal chemical blocking agent fluorenylmethoxycarbonyl was much more effective than peptide with a free NH2-terminal amine. Thus, the concentration of effective agent in this section's experiments was considerably less than the nominal concentration.
Cis nickel was also without effect, but this is not surprising, since at the cis pH (5.3), Ni2+ complexes poorly with histidines.
Although the mechanism by which the H6 tag closes T domain channels is not definitely established, it most likely is acting as a channel blocker.
Lisa Senzel, Michael Gordon, Robert O. Blaustein, K. Joon Oh, R. John Collier, Alan Finkelstein; Topography of Diphtheria Toxin's T Domain in the Open Channel State. J Gen Physiol 1 April 2000; 115 (4): 421–434. doi: https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.115.4.421
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