Abstract

Bacterial pore-forming toxins (PFTs) are structurally diverse pathogen-secreted proteins that form cell-damaging channels in the membranes of host cells. Most PFTs are released as water-soluble monomers that first oligomerize on the membrane before inserting a transmembrane channel. To modulate specificity and increase potency, many PFTs recognize specific cell surface receptors that increase the local toxin concentration on cell membranes, thereby facilitating channel formation. Vibrio cholerae cytolysin (VCC) is a toxin secreted by the human pathogen responsible for pandemic cholera disease and acts as a defensive agent against the host immune system. Although it has been shown that VCC utilizes specific glycan receptors on the cell surface, additional direct contacts with the membrane must also play a role in toxin binding. To better understand the nature of these interactions, we conducted a systematic investigation of the membrane-binding surface of VCC to identify additional membrane interactions important in cell targeting. Through cell-based assays on several human-derived cell lines, we show that VCC is unlikely to utilize high affinity protein receptors as do structurally similar toxins from Staphylococcus aureus. Next, we identified a number of specific amino acid residues that greatly diminish the VCC potency against cells and investigated the interplay between glycan binding and these direct lipid contacts. Finally, we used model membranes to parse the importance of these key residues in lipid and cholesterol binding. Our study provides a complete functional map of the VCC membrane-binding surface and insights into the integration of sugar, lipid, and cholesterol binding interactions.

Highlights

  • Vibrio cholerae secretes a toxin that forms channels in host cells

  • pore-forming toxins (PFTs) have evolved to recognize a diverse set of membrane receptors and requirements for cholesterol or hostspecific glycans to aid in cell targeting

  • This study illustrates how Vibrio cholerae cytolysin (VCC) utilizes two types of interactions to achieve high affinity binding to cell membranes

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Summary

Background

Vibrio cholerae secretes a toxin that forms channels in host cells. Results: Our study provides a complete structure/function mapping of the toxin membrane-interacting surface. How water-soluble monomers assemble to form the final channel is less well understood, but the generally accepted paradigm based on studies of staphylococcal ␣-hemolysin [14] and applicable to VCC [15] suggests that watersoluble monomers bind individually to membranes via interactions with the membrane-contacting rim domain (Fig. 1A), diffuse and assemble into oligomeric non-lytic “prepores,” and cooperatively insert their amphipathic loops into the. We hypothesize that these mutations affect specific interactions with lipids and cholesterol and suggest several known cholesterol-binding motifs as potential candidates for their effects

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