Pertussis toxin, a protein virulence factor produced by Bordetella pertussis, is composed of an A protomer and a B oligomer. The A protomer consists of a single polypeptide, termed the S1 subunit, which disrupts transmembrane signaling by ADP-ribosylating eukaryotic G-proteins. The B oligomer, containing five polypeptides, binds to cell receptors (most likely containing carbohydrate) and delivers the S1 subunit. Current knowledge suggests that expression of ADP-ribosyltransferase activity in target eukaryotic cells arises after 1) nucleotides and membrane lipids allosterically promote the release of the S1 subunit; and 2) the single disulfide bond in the S1 subunit is reduced by reductants such as glutathione. This model suggests conditions for the proper use of the toxin as an experimental reagent.
Adding NAD to murine T lymphocytes inhibits their functions and induces annexin V binding. This report shows that NAD induces cell death in a subset of T cells within seconds whereas others do not die until many hours later. Low NAD concentrations (<10 μM) suffice to trigger rapid cell death, which is associated with annexin V binding and membrane pore formation, is not blocked by the caspase inhibitor Z-VADfmk, and requires functional P2X7 receptors. The slower induction of death requires higher NAD concentrations (>100 μM), is blocked by caspase inhibitor Z-VADfmk, is associated with DNA fragmentation, and does not require P2X7 receptors. T cells degrade NAD to ADP-ribose (ADPR), and adding ADPR to T cells leads to slow but not rapid cell death. NAD but not ADPR provides the substrate for ADP-ribosyltransferase (ART-2)-mediated attachment of ADP-ribosyl groups to cell surface proteins; expression of ART-2 is required for NAD to trigger rapid but not slow cell death. These results support the hypothesis that cell surface ART-2 uses NAD but not ADPR to attach ADP-ribosyl groups to the cell surface, and that these groups act as ligands for P2X7 receptors that then induce rapid cell death. Adding either NAD or ADPR also triggers a different set of mechanisms, not requiring ART-2 or P2X7 receptors that more slowly induce cell death.
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