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Structural and functional characterization of the pore-forming domain of pinholin S 21 68
Author(s) -
Lena M. E. Steger,
Annika Kohlmeyer,
Parvesh Wadhwani,
Jochen Bürck,
Erik Strandberg,
Johannes Reichert,
Stephan L. Grage,
Sergii Afonin,
Marin Kempfer,
Anne Görner,
Julia Koch,
Torsten H. Walther,
Anne S. Ulrich
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
proceedings of the national academy of sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.011
H-Index - 771
eISSN - 1091-6490
pISSN - 0027-8424
DOI - 10.1073/pnas.2007979117
Subject(s) - lytic cycle , transmembrane domain , helix (gastropod) , lysis , biophysics , transmembrane protein , bacteriophage , membrane , chemistry , crystallography , leucine zipper , biochemistry , biology , escherichia coli , virus , peptide sequence , virology , ecology , receptor , snail , gene
Pinholin S 21 68 triggers the lytic cycle of bacteriophage φ21 in infected Escherichia coli Activated transmembrane dimers oligomerize into small holes and uncouple the proton gradient. Transmembrane domain 1 (TMD1) regulates this activity, while TMD2 is postulated to form the actual "pinholes." Focusing on the TMD2 fragment, we used synchrotron radiation-based circular dichroism to confirm its α-helical conformation and transmembrane alignment. Solid-state 15 N-NMR in oriented DMPC bilayers yielded a helix tilt angle of τ = 14°, a high order parameter ( S mol = 0.9), and revealed the azimuthal angle. The resulting rotational orientation places an extended glycine zipper motif (G 40 xxxS 44 xxxG 48 ) together with a patch of H-bonding residues (T 51 , T 54 , N 55 ) sideways along TMD2, available for helix-helix interactions. Using fluorescence vesicle leakage assays, we demonstrate that TMD2 forms stable holes with an estimated diameter of 2 nm, as long as the glycine zipper motif remains intact. Based on our experimental data, we suggest structural models for the oligomeric pinhole (right-handed heptameric TMD2 bundle), for the active dimer (right-handed Gly-zipped TMD2/TMD2 dimer), and for the full-length pinholin protein before being triggered (Gly-zipped TMD2/TMD1-TMD1/TMD2 dimer in a line).

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