FUSED POLYCATIONIC PEPTIDE MEDIATES DELIVERY OF DIPHTHERIA-TOXIN-A CHAIN TO THE CYTOSOL IN THE PRESENCE OF ANTHRAX PROTECTIVE ANTIGEN

Citation
Sr. Blanke et al., FUSED POLYCATIONIC PEPTIDE MEDIATES DELIVERY OF DIPHTHERIA-TOXIN-A CHAIN TO THE CYTOSOL IN THE PRESENCE OF ANTHRAX PROTECTIVE ANTIGEN, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United Statesof America, 93(16), 1996, pp. 8437-8442
Citations number
33
Categorie Soggetti
Multidisciplinary Sciences
ISSN journal
00278424
Volume
93
Issue
16
Year of publication
1996
Pages
8437 - 8442
Database
ISI
SICI code
0027-8424(1996)93:16<8437:FPPMDO>2.0.ZU;2-W
Abstract
The lethal factor (LF) and edema factor (EF) of anthrax toxin bind by means of their amino-terminal domains to protective antigen (PA) on th e surface of toxin-sensitive cells and are translocated to the cytosol , where they act on intracellular targets, Genetically fusing the amin oterminal domain of LF (LF(N); residues 1-255) to certain heterologous proteins has been shown to potentiate these proteins for PA-dependent delivery to the cytosol. We report here that short tracts of lysine, arginine, or histidine residues can also potentiate a protein for such PA-dependent delivery, Fusion of these polycationic tracts to the ami no terminus of the enzymic A chain of diphtheria toxin (DTA; residues 1-193) enabled it to be translocated to the cytosol by PA and inhibit protein synthesis. The efficiency of translocation was dependent on tr act length: (LF(N) > Lys(8) > Lys(6) > Lys(3)). Lys(6) was approximate to 100-fold more active than Arg(6) or His(6), whereas Glu(6) and (Se rSerGly)(2) were inactive. Arg(6)DTA was partially degraded in cell cu lture, which may explain its low activity relative to that of Lys(6)DT A. The polycationic tracts may bind to anionic sites at the cell surfa ce (possibly on PA), allowing the fusion proteins to be coendocytosed with PA and delivered to the endosome, where translocation to the cyto sol occurs, Excess free LF(N) blocked the action of LF(N)DTA, but not of Lys(6)DTA, This implies that binding to the LF/EF site is not an ob ligatory step in translocation and suggests that the polycationic tag binds to a different site, Besides elucidating the process of transloc ation in anthrax toxin, these findings may aid in developing systems t o deliver heterologous proteins and peptides to the cytoplasm of mamma lian cells.