Two distinct conformers of the adenylate cyclase toxin (CyaA) appear to accomplish its two parallel activities within target cell membrane. The translocating conformer would deliver the N-terminal adenylyl cyclase (AC) enzyme domain across plasma membrane into cytosol of cells, while the pore precursor conformer would assemble into oligomeric cation-selective pores and permeabilize cellular membrane.
Both toxin activities then involve a membrane-interacting 'AC-to-Hly-linking segment' (residues 400 to 500). Here, we report the NMR structure of the corresponding CyaA(411-490) polypeptide in dodecylphosphocholine micelles and show that it consists of two alpha-helices linked by an unrestrained loop.
The N-terminal alpha-helix (Gly418 to His439) remained solvent accessible, while the C-terminal alpha-helix (His457 to Phe485) was fully enclosed within detergent micelles. CyaA(411-490) weakly bound Ca2+ ions (apparent K-D 2.6 mM) and permeabilized negatively charged lipid vesicles.
At high concentrations (10 mu M) the CyaA(411-490) polypeptide formed stable conductance units in artificial lipid bilayers with applied voltage, suggesting its possible transmembrane orientation in the membrane-inserted toxin. Mutagenesis revealed that two clusters of negatively charged residues within the 'AC-to-Hly-linking segment' (Glu419 to Glu432 and Asp445 to Glu448) regulate the balance between the AC domain translocating and pore-forming capacities of CyaA in function of calcium concentration.