Pinholin S68 triggers the lytic cycle of bacteriophage φ21 in infected Activated transmembrane dimers oligomerize into small holes and uncouple the proton gradient. Transmembrane domain 1 (TMD1) regulates this activity, while TMD2 is postulated to form the actual "pinholes." Focusing on the TMD2 fragment, we used synchrotron radiation-based circular dichroism to confirm its α-helical conformation and transmembrane alignment. Solid-state N-NMR in oriented DMPC bilayers yielded a helix tilt angle of τ = 14°, a high order parameter ( = 0.9), and revealed the azimuthal angle. The resulting rotational orientation places an extended glycine zipper motif (GxxxSxxxG) together with a patch of H-bonding residues (T, T, N) sideways along TMD2, available for helix-helix interactions. Using fluorescence vesicle leakage assays, we demonstrate that TMD2 forms stable holes with an estimated diameter of 2 nm, as long as the glycine zipper motif remains intact. Based on our experimental data, we suggest structural models for the oligomeric pinhole (right-handed heptameric TMD2 bundle), for the active dimer (right-handed Gly-zipped TMD2/TMD2 dimer), and for the full-length pinholin protein before being triggered (Gly-zipped TMD2/TMD1-TMD1/TMD2 dimer in a line).
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7703622 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2007979117 | DOI Listing |
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