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1ETN

MOLECULAR STRUCTURE OF THE TOXIC DOMAIN OF HEAT-STABLE ENTEROTOXIN PRODUCED BY A PATHOGENIC STRAIN OF ESCHERICHIA COLI

Summary for 1ETN
Entry DOI10.2210/pdb1etn/pdb
Descriptor5-BETA-MERCAPTOPROPIONATE HEAT-STABLE ENTEROTOXIN (2 entities in total)
Functional Keywordsenterotoxin
Biological sourceEscherichia coli
Cellular locationSecreted: P01559
Total number of polymer chains1
Total formula weight1258.56
Authors
Sato, T.,Shimonishi, Y. (deposition date: 1994-03-15, release date: 1996-01-29, Last modification date: 2025-03-26)
Primary citationOzaki, H.,Sato, T.,Kubota, H.,Hata, Y.,Katsube, Y.,Shimonishi, Y.
Molecular structure of the toxin domain of heat-stable enterotoxin produced by a pathogenic strain of Escherichia coli. A putative binding site for a binding protein on rat intestinal epithelial cell membranes.
J.Biol.Chem., 266:5934-5941, 1991
Cited by
PubMed Abstract: Heat-stable enterotoxins are a family of toxin peptides that are produced by enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli and consist of 18 and 19 amino acid residues (Aimoto, S., Takao, T., Shimonishi, Y., Hara, S., Takeda, T., Takeda, Y., and Miwatani, T. (1982) Eur. J. Biochem. 129, 257-263). A synthetic fully toxic analog of the enterotoxin, Mpr5-STp(5-17), where Mpr is beta-mercaptopropionic acid and which consists of 13 amino acid residues from Cys5 to Cys17 in a heat-stable enterotoxin but is deaminated at its N terminus (Kubota, H., Hidaka, Y., Ozaki, H., Ito, H., Hirayama, T., Takeda, Y., and Shimonishi, Y. (1989) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 161, 229-235), has been crystalized from water, and its crystal structure has been solved by a direct method and refined by least square procedures to give an R factor of 0.089. The crystal belongs to the orthorhombic space group P2(1)2(1)2(1) with unit cell constants a = 21.010 (2) A, b = 27.621 (4) A, and c = 12.781 (1) A. The asymmetric unit of the crystals contains one peptide molecule with 13 water molecules. A right-hand spiral peptide backbone extends throughout the molecule. Three beta-turns are located along this spiral and fixed tightly by three intramolecular disulfide linkages. The actual structure predicts the biniding region on the enterotoxin to the receptor protein on the membrane of rat intestinal epithelial cells.
PubMed: 2005130
PDB entries with the same primary citation
Experimental method
X-RAY DIFFRACTION (0.89 Å)
Structure validation

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