Actinoporins constitute a group of small and basic α pore-forming toxins produced by sea anemones. In an aqueous solution, actinoporins remain stably folded but, upon interaction with lipid bilayers, become integral membrane structures. Sticholysins I and II (StnI and
StnII) are two very similar actinoporins produced by the Caribbean Sea anemone Stichodactyla helianthus. They show 93% of sequence homology but, quite surprisingly,
different pore-formation activity, when measured as their ability to produce hemolysis. This is due to a salt bridge, present in StnI but not in StnII, which makes the N-terminal
detachment in StnI more difficult and thus impairs the hemolysis. To study this hypothesis in deeper detail, the group at Complutense University of Madrid, Faculty of Chemical Sciences, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology has prepared mutants of StnI (StnI I7C/K68C) and II (StnII I6C/K67C) where two Cys residues have been strategically located to covalently bind, employing a disulfide bond, the Nterminal stretch to the β-sandwich core. The four proteins (StnI, StnII, StnI I7C/K68C, and
StnII StnII I6C/K67C) have been characterized in functional terms, revealing that the mutants do bind to sphingomyelin-containing membranes but do not progress to form a pore.
Our work was divided into three parts. The first and main part was the cloning of all four genes coding for proteins (StnI and StnII wild-type as well as StnI I7C/K68C and StnII
I6C/K67C) in the selected plasmid, that enables expression of recombinant proteins within a specific peptides-construct facilitating further research of the proteins with atomic force microscopy. The second part was expression and purification of recombinant StnII. The peptides construct, called NPS3, would allow us to use the proteins in a single-molecule technique of AFM, in which a purified protein of interest is tethered between the tip of an AFM cantilever and a surface that can be retracted with sub-nanometer precision, thanks to piezoelectric actuators. The assumption is that this single-molecule technique will mimic the
mechanical perturbations suffered by sticholysins during the molecular metamorphosis needed to assemble them into a transmembrane pore.The third part was a hemolysis assay with all four proteins in the absence and in the presence
of DTT, an agent that reduces the disulfide bonds. In the presence of DTT, all four proteins
showed comparable hemolytic activity, while in the absence of DTT, only wild-type proteins
showed visible hemolysis.
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