Journal:IUCrJ:S2052252524001969
From Proteopedia
(Difference between revisions)

Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
In this paper we describe the structure of a BC shell from an insecticidal bacterium where the C component is produced from a gene that is distant in the genome from the known ABC genetic locus, an example of an “orphan” toxin gene. We also determine the structure of the toxin cargo, which shows it to likely be an ADP-ribosyltransferase that modifies actin in the target cell, preventing actin polymerisation and hence triggering apoptotic cell death. We show that the native toxin isolated from the bacterium contains multiple toxic cargoes, showing that ''in vivo'', a range of toxic proteins can be delivered using this shared mechanism. | In this paper we describe the structure of a BC shell from an insecticidal bacterium where the C component is produced from a gene that is distant in the genome from the known ABC genetic locus, an example of an “orphan” toxin gene. We also determine the structure of the toxin cargo, which shows it to likely be an ADP-ribosyltransferase that modifies actin in the target cell, preventing actin polymerisation and hence triggering apoptotic cell death. We show that the native toxin isolated from the bacterium contains multiple toxic cargoes, showing that ''in vivo'', a range of toxic proteins can be delivered using this shared mechanism. | ||
- | <scene name='10/1034690/Yenbyenc3ntd/1'>The crystal structure of YenB/YenC3< | + | <scene name='10/1034690/Yenbyenc3ntd/1'>The crystal structure of YenB/YenC3</scene><sub>NTD</sub>. |
<b>References</b><br> | <b>References</b><br> |
Revision as of 13:26, 13 March 2024
|
This page complements a publication in scientific journals and is one of the Proteopedia's Interactive 3D Complement pages. For aditional details please see I3DC.