Role of Tryptophan Residues in Toxicity of Cry1Ab Toxin from Bacillus thuringiensis
Author(s) -
Cristopher Padilla,
Liliana PardoLópez,
Gustavo de la Riva,
Isabel Gómez,
Jorge Sánchez,
Georgina Hernández,
María Eugenia Nuñez-Valdez,
Marianne P. Carey,
Donald H. Dean,
Óscar Álzate,
Mário Soberón,
Alejandra Bravo
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
applied and environmental microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.552
H-Index - 324
eISSN - 1070-6291
pISSN - 0099-2240
DOI - 10.1128/aem.72.1.901-907.2006
Subject(s) - bacillus thuringiensis , tryptophan , toxin , biochemistry , brush border , mutagenesis , biology , diphtheria toxin , site directed mutagenesis , cysteine , residue (chemistry) , chemistry , mutant , vesicle , amino acid , membrane , bacteria , genetics , gene , enzyme
Bacillus thuringiensis produces insecticidal proteins (Cry protoxins) during the sporulation phase as parasporal crystals. During intoxication, the Cry protoxins must change from insoluble crystals into membrane-inserted toxins which form ionic pores. The structural changes of Cry toxins during oligomerization and insertion into the membrane are still unknown. The Cry1Ab toxin has nine tryptophan residues; seven are located in domain I, the pore-forming domain, and two are located in domain II, which is involved in receptor recognition. Eight Trp residues are highly conserved within the whole family of three-domain Cry proteins, suggesting an essential role for these residues in the structural folding and function of the toxin. In this work, we analyzed the role of Trp residues in the structure and function of Cry1Ab toxin. We replaced the Trp residues with phenylalanine or cysteine using site-directed mutagenesis. Our results show that W65 and W316 are important for insecticidal activity of the toxin since their replacement by Phe reduced the toxicity against Manduca sexta. The presence of hydrophobic residue is important at positions 117, 219, 226, and 455 since replacement by Cys affected either the crystal formation or the insecticidal activity of the toxin in contrast to replacement by Phe in these positions. Additionally, some mutants in positions 219, 316, and 455 were also affected in binding to brush border membrane vesicles (BBMV). This is the first report that studies the role of Trp residues in the activity of Cry toxins.
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