The role of the C-terminal region of pulchellin A-chain in the interaction with membrane model systems.

2012 
Abstract Pulchellin is a R ibosome I nactivating P rotein containing an A-chain (PAC), whose toxic activity requires crossing the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane. In this paper, we investigate the interaction between recombinant PAC (rPAC) and Langmuir monolayers of dipalmitoyl phosphatidyl glycerol (DPPG), which served as membrane model. Three catalytically active, truncated PACs with increasing deletion of the C-terminal region, possessing 244, 239 and 236 residues (rPAC 244 , rPAC 239 and rPAC 236 ), were studied. rPAC had the strongest interaction with the DPPG monolayer, inducing a large expansion in its surface pressure–area isotherm. The affinity to DPPG decreased with increased deletion of the C-terminal region. When the C-terminal region was deleted completely (rPAC 236 ), the interaction was recovered, probably because other hydrophobic regions were exposed to the membrane. Using Polarization Modulated-Infrared Reflection Absorption Spectroscopy (PM-IRRAS) we observed that at a bare air/water interface rPAC comprised mainly α-helix structures, the C-terminal region had unordered structures when interacting with DPPG. For rPAC 236 the α-helices were preserved even in the presence of DPPG. These results confirm the importance of the C-terminal region for PAC-ER membrane interaction. The partial unfolding only with preserved C-terminal appears a key step for the protein to reach the cytosol and develop its toxic activity.
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