Abstract

Clostridium perfringens enterotoxin is a common cause of food-borne and antibiotic-associated diarrhea. The toxin's receptors on intestinal epithelial cells include claudin-3 and -4, members of a large family of tight junction proteins. Toxin-induced cytolytic pore formation requires residues in the NH(2)-terminal half, whereas residues near the COOH terminus are required for binding to claudins. The claudin-binding COOH-terminal domain is not toxic and is currently under investigation as a potential drug absorption enhancer. Because claudin-4 is overexpressed on some human cancers, the toxin is also being investigated for targeting chemotherapy. Our aim was to solve the structure of the claudin-binding domain to advance its therapeutic applications. The structure of a 14-kDa fragment containing residues 194 to the native COOH terminus at position 319 was solved by x-ray diffraction to a resolution of 1.75A. The structure is a nine-strand beta sandwich with previously unappreciated similarity to the receptor-binding domains of several other toxins of spore-forming bacteria, including the collagen-binding domain of ColG from Clostridium histolyticum and the large Cry family of toxins (including Cry4Ba) of Bacillus thuringiensis. Correlations with previous studies suggest that the claudin-4 binding site is on a large surface loop between strands beta8 and beta9 or includes these strands. The sequence that was crystallized (residues 194-319) binds to purified human claudin-4 with a 1:1 stoichiometry and affinity in the submicromolar range similar to that observed for binding of native toxin to cells. Our results provide a structural framework to advance therapeutic applications of the toxin and suggest a common ancestor for several receptor-binding domains of bacterial toxins.

Highlights

  • Toxin (CPE).3 CPE has been implicated in antibiotic-associated diarrhea in humans and is an important cause of gastrointestinal illness in domestic animals [1]

  • CPE binds to human ileal epithelium, where it induces fluid and electrolyte loss along with epithelial cell necrosis [2]

  • CPE cytotoxicity is a multistep process that initiates with CPE binding to an extracellular loop on specific members of the large claudin family of tight junction proteins [3, 4]

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Summary

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Oligonucleotides were synthesized by Invitrogen, and DNA was sequenced at the Genome Analysis Core of the University of North Carolina Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center.

Protein Expression and Purification
Binding Assays
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Phasing and refinement
Full Text
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