2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(65f) Cholera Toxin Assault on Lipid Membranes Containing Ganglioside Gm1: an X-Ray Reflectivity and Grazing Incidence Diffraction Study at the Air-Water Interface
Authors
Utilizing GIXD, the structure of cholera toxin (CTAB5) bound to its putative ganglioside receptor has been studied. This is one of very few proteins to be characterized in two dimensions in a fully hydrated state. The observed GIXD Bragg peaks indicate cholera toxin has a hexagonal 2D unit cell. The pentameric binding portion of cholera toxin (CTB5), in particular at low pH, had improved in-plane ordering over the full toxin (CTAB5). Enzymatically cleaving the A subunit (activation of the full toxin) also increased the protein layer ordering. These findings are consistent with A-subunit flexibility and motion causing packing inefficiencies and greater disorder of the protein layer. Corroborative evidence was provided by Bragg rod analysis, which indicated a shortening of the scattering units in the cholera layer after activation of CTAB5. These studies revealed key changes in the behavior of the cholera toxin-lipid system under different pH conditions.