Function
Diphtheria toxin (DT) is a toxin which is secreted by the bacteria causing diphtheria. DT catalyzes the transfer of NAD to a diphthamide residue in the elongation factor-2 and thus inhibiting protein synthesis.[1]
Disease
A lethal dose of DT is ca. 0.1 μg per 1 kg of bodyweight.
Relevance
DT is used in several drugs as chemotherapeutic agent and as an immunotoxin.
Structural highlights
DT is proteolitically cleaved into 2 fragments. Fragment A contains the and fragment B contains the transmembrane (T) and receptor-binding (R) domains. DT active site is located in a cleft in the C domain.[2] The 2 monomers of DT interact by domain swapping to form a compact, globular dimer structure.