Change of the donor substrate specificity of clostridium difficile toxin B by site-directed mutagenesis

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Abstract

The large cytotoxins of Clostridia species glycosylate and thereby inactivate small GTPases of the Rho family. Clostridium difficile toxins A and B and Clostridium sordellii lethal toxin use UDP-glucose as the donor for glucosylation of Rho/Ras GTPases. In contrast, α-toxin from Clostridium novyi N-acetylglucosaminylates Rho GTPases by using UDP-N-acetylglucosamine as a donor substrate. Based on the crystal structure of C. difficile toxin B, we studied the sugar donor specificity of the toxins by site-directed mutagenesis. The changing of Ile-383 and Gln-385 in toxin B to serine and alanine, respectively, largely increased the acceptance of UDP-N-acetylglucosamine as a sugar donor for modification of RhoA. The Km value was reduced from 960 to 26 μM for the double mutant. Accordingly, the potential of the double mutant of toxin B to hydrolyze UDP-N-acetylglucosamine was higher than that for UDP-glucose. The changing of Ile-383 and Gln-385 in the lethal toxin of C. sordellii allowed modification of Ras in the presence of UDP-N-acetyl- glucosamine and reduced the acceptance of UDP-glucose as a donor for glycosylation. Vice versa, the changing of the equivalent residues in C. novyi α-toxin from Ser-385 and Ala-387 to isoleucine and glutamine, respectively, reversed the donor specificity of the toxin from UDP-N-acetylglucosamine to UDP-glucose. These data demonstrate that two amino acid residues are crucial for the cosubstrate specificity of clostridial glycosylating toxins. © 2005 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

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Jank, T., Reinert, D. J., Giesemann, T., Schulz, G. E., & Aktories, K. (2005). Change of the donor substrate specificity of clostridium difficile toxin B by site-directed mutagenesis. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 280(45), 37833–37838. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M506836200

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