Cleavage of colicin E1 molecules with a variety of proteases or with cyanogen bromide (CNBr) generates COOH-terminal fragments which have channel-forming activity similar to that of intact colicin in planar lipid bilayer membranes. The smallest channel-forming fragment obtained by CNBr cleavage of the wild-type molecule consists of the C-terminal 152 amino acids. By the use of oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis, we have made nine mutants along this 152 amino acid peptide, in which an amino acid was replaced by methionine in order to create a new CNBr cleavage site. The smallest of the CNBr-cleaved C-terminal fragments with channel-forming activity, in planar bilayer membranes, was generated by cleavage at new Met position 428 and has 94 amino acids, whereas a 75 amino acid peptide produced by cleavage of a new Met at position 447 did not have channel activity. The NH2-terminus of the channel-forming domain of colicin E1 appears therefore to lie between residues 428 and 447. Since, however, the last six C-terminal residues of the colicin can be removed without changing activity, the number of amino acids necessary to form the channel is 88 or less. In addition, the unique Cys residue in colicin E1 was replaced by Gly, and nine mutants were then made with Cys placed at sequential locations along the peptide for eventual use as sulfhydryl attachment sites to determine the local environment of the replaced amino acid. In the course of making 21 mutants, eight charged residues have been replaced by uncharged Met or Cys without changing the biological activity of the intact molecule. It has been proposed previously that the conformation of the colicin E1 channel is a barrel formed from five or six alpha-helices, each having 20 amino acids spanning the membrane and two to four residues making the turn at the boundary of the membrane. Our finding that 88 amino acids can make an active channel, combined with recently reported stoichiometric evidence that the channel is a monomer excludes this model and adds significant constraints which can be used in building a molecular model of the channel.
The ability of colicin A, a bacteriocin produced by some Enterobacteriaceae, to fuse phospholipid vesicles at acidic pH, was demonstrated by electron microscopy and resonance energy transfer. The fusion depends on protein concentration and on the nature of the phospholipids. Vesicles, prepared from Escherichia coli phospholipids, fused one or more rounds at pH 4.5 upon addition of stochiometric amounts of colicin A. Fusion was not only induced by pore-forming colicins (E1, K) but also by colicins that contain nuclease activities (E2, E3). By recombinant DNA technology it is shown that the first glycine-rich 70 NH2-terminal amino acids and, most probably, the extreme COOH-terminal end of colicin A are involved in the fusion activity of the protein. The physiological relevance of this property of colicins is discussed.
A plasmid (pColAF1), derived from pColA, and lacking the region encoding Cai (colicin A immunity protein) and Cal (colicin A lysis protein) has been constructed. The strains carrying pColAF1 produce normal amounts of colicin A which remains in the cell cytoplasm and does not result in loss of viability. Similar results have also been obtained for transposon insertion mutants lacking Cai. Structure prediction analysis indicates that four peptide regions of Cai might span the cytoplasmic membrane. Since the NH2- and COOH-terminal regions are charged, this analysis suggests a topology of the 178 residues polypeptide chain in which regions 38 to 70 and 124 to 143 might be exposed at the outer side of the cytoplasmic membrane. With mutants constructed using recombinant DNA techniques, we could demonstrate that the removal of a 30 residue COOH-terminal region, and mutations altering the surface exposed loop comprised of aminoacid residues 124-143 abolish the protecting function of Cai.
The region containing the origin and regulatory sites for replication as well as the immunity gene (iaa) have been localized on the plasmid ColA-CA31. The region involved in replication functions of ColA can be hybridized with that of ColE1. It is located between 1 and 1 kb on the plasmid map previously published (Morlon et al. 1982a). A 0.50 Kb HincII fragment of ColA can be weakly hybridized to the ColE1 immunity region. This fragment contains iaa since directed in vitro mutagenesis at an internal restriction site can abolish the immunity to colicin A; however, it does not contain the entire iaa. Knowing the localization of regions involved in autonomous DNA replication and immunity, a mini-ColA plasmid was constructed that contains these two regions. The mini-ColA of 2.8 Kb can be amplified in the presence of chloramphenicol and confers the immunity to transformants. It thus constitutes a useful cloning vector. Expression of ColA and of the various constructed plasmids in the maxicell system suggests that the immunity protein has a molecular weight of about 18-20 Kd.
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