High susceptibility of rabbit erythrocytes toward the pore-forming action of staphylococcal α-toxin correlates with the presence of saturable, high affinity binding sites. All efforts to identify a protein or glycolipid receptor have failed, and the fact that liposomes composed solely of phosphatidylcholine are efficiently permeabilized adds to the enigma. A novel concept is advanced here to explain the puzzle. We propose that low affinity binding moieties can assume the role of high affinity binding sites due to their spatial arrangement in the membrane. Evidence is presented that phosphocholine head groups of sphingomyelin, clustered in sphingomyelin-cholesterol microdomains, serve this function for α-toxin. Clustering is required so that oligomerization, which is prerequisite for stable attachment of the toxin to the membrane, can efficiently occur. Outside these clusters, binding to phosphocholine is too transient for toxin monomers to find each other. The principle of membrane targeting in the absence of any genuine, high affinity receptor may also underlie the assembly of other lipid-inserted oligomers including cytotoxic peptides, protein toxins, and immune effector molecules. © 2006 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Valeva, A., Hellmann, N., Walev, I., Strand, D., Plate, M., Boukhallouk, F., … Bhakdi, S. (2006). Evidence that clustered phosphocholine head groups serve as sites for binding and assembly of an oligomeric protein pore. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 281(36), 26014–26021. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M601960200
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