Channelpedia

PubMed 1693745


Referenced in: none

Automatically associated channels: Kir2.3 , Slo1



Title: Structure and dynamics of the colicin E1 channel.

Authors: W A Cramer, F S Cohen, A R Merrill, H Y Song

Journal, date & volume: Mol. Microbiol., 1990 Apr , 4, 519-26

PubMed link: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1693745


Abstract
The toxin-like and bactericidal colicin E1 molecule is of interest for problems of toxin action, polypeptide translocation across membranes, voltage-gated channels, and receptor function. Colicin E1 binds to a receptor in the outer membrane and is translocated across the cell envelope to the inner membrane. Import of the colicin channel-forming domain into the inner membrane involves a translocation-competent intermediate state and a membrane potential-dependent movement of one third to one half of the channel peptide into the membrane bilayer. The voltage-gated channel has a conductance sufficiently large to depolarize the Escherichia coli cytoplasmic membrane. Amino acid residues that affect the channel ion selectivity have been identified by site-directed mutagenesis. The colicin E1 channel is one of a few membrane proteins whose secondary structures in the membrane, predominantly alpha-helix, have been determined by physico-chemical techniques. Hypothesis for the identity of the trans-membrane helices, and the mechanism of binding to the membrane, are influenced by the solved crystal structure of the soluble colicin A channel peptide. The protective action of immunity protein is a unique aspect of the colicin problem, and information has been obtained, by genetic techniques, about the probable membrane topography of the imm gene product.