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Mosquito larvicide BinAB revealed by de novo phasing with an X-ray laser

Authors :
Colletier, Jacques-Philippe
Sawaya, Michael R.
Gingery, Mari
Rodriguez, Jose A.
Cascio, Duilio
Brewster, Aaron S.
Michels-Clark, Tara
Hice, Robert H.
Coquelle, Nicolas
Boutet, Sébastien
Williams, Garth J.
Messerschmidt, Marc
DePonte, Daniel P.
Sierra, Raymond G.
Laksmono, Hartawan
Koglin, Jason E.
Hunter, Mark S.
Park, Hyun-Woo
Uervirojnangkoorn, Monarin
Bideshi, Dennis K.
Brunger, Axel T.
Federici, Brian A.
Sauter, Nicholas K.
Eisenberg, David S.
Source :
Nature
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

BinAB is a naturally occurring paracrystalline larvicide distributed worldwide to combat the devastating diseases borne by mosquitoes. These crystals are composed of homologous molecules, BinA and BinB, which play distinct roles in the multi-step intoxication process, transforming from harmless, robust crystals, to soluble protoxin heterodimers, to internalized mature toxin, and finally to toxic oligomeric pores. The small size of the crystals-50 unit cells per edge, on average-has impeded structural characterization by conventional means. Here we report the structure of Lysinibacillus sphaericus BinAB solved de novo by serial-femtosecond crystallography at an X-ray free-electron laser. The structure reveals tyrosine- and carboxylate-mediated contacts acting as pH switches to release soluble protoxin in the alkaline larval midgut. An enormous heterodimeric interface appears to be responsible for anchoring BinA to receptor-bound BinB for co-internalization. Remarkably, this interface is largely composed of propeptides, suggesting that proteolytic maturation would trigger dissociation of the heterodimer and progression to pore formation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
539
Issue :
7627
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........185f79a960c2157c9cc89a5526e7332e