Identification of an essential cleavage site in ColE7 required for import and killing of cells.

2005 
Abstract Colicin E7 (ColE7), a nuclease toxin released from Escherichia coli, kills susceptible bacteria under environmental stress. Nuclease colicins are processed during translocation with only the cytotoxic nuclease domains traversing the inner membrane to cleave tRNA, rRNA, or DNA in the cytoplasm of target cells. In this study, we show that the E. coli periplasmic extract cleaves ColE7 between Lys446 and Arg447 in the presence or absence of its inhibitor Im7 protein. Several residues near cleavage sites were mutated, but only mutants of Arg447 completely lost in vivo cell-killing activity. Both the full-length and the nuclease domain of Arg447 mutants retained their nuclease activities, indicating that failure to kill cells was not a consequence of damage to the endonuclease activity of the enzyme. Moreover, the R447E ColE7 mutant was not cleaved at its 447 site by periplasmic extracts or transported into the cytoplasm of target cells. Collectively, these results suggest that ColE7 is cleaved at Arg447 during translocation and that cleavage is an essential step for ColE7 import into the cytoplasm of target cells and its cell-killing activity. Conserved basic residues aligned with Arg447 have also been found in other nuclease colicins, implying that the processing at this position may be common to other colicins during translocation.
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