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9UJ0

Structure of Aegerolysin-L pore

This is a non-PDB format compatible entry.
Summary for 9UJ0
Entry DOI10.2210/pdb9uj0/pdb
EMDB information64205
DescriptorAeg-L (1 entity in total)
Functional Keywordsalternaria alternata pore-forming toxin, aeg-l, toxin
Biological sourceAlternaria alternata
More
Total number of polymer chains36
Total formula weight1996098.48
Authors
Gao, P.,Zhao, C.Q. (deposition date: 2025-04-16, release date: 2025-06-18, Last modification date: 2025-09-24)
Primary citationShi, K.,Lv, Y.,Zhao, C.,Zeng, H.,Wang, Y.,Liu, Y.,Li, L.,Chen, S.,Gao, P.,Shao, F.,Xu, M.
Epithelial cell membrane perforation induces allergic airway inflammation.
Nature, 645:475-483, 2025
Cited by
PubMed Abstract: Allergens that induce allergic airway inflammation are highly diverse, but they commonly activate type 2 immune responses. Airway epithelial cells are crucial in allergen sensing. However, the shared features among diverse allergens that elicit similar innate responses, and their epithelial detection mechanisms, remain poorly defined. Here we identify pore-forming proteins as one of the common stimuli of allergic airway inflammation and reveal their immune-activation mechanisms. Using the prevalent mould allergen Alternaria alternata as a model, we established an in vitro system to investigate type 2 innate immune sensing. A six-step biochemical fractionation identified Aeg-S and Aeg-L as the core immune-stimulatory components. Biochemical reconstitution and cryo-electron microscopy reveal that these proteins form 16- to 20-mer transmembrane pore complexes. Their cooperative perforation acts as a bona fide type 2 immune adjuvant to support antigen-specific T helper 2 and immunoglobulin E responses. Genetically engineered A. alternata strains that lack pore-forming activity do not induce allergic responses in mice. Furthermore, pore-forming proteins from various species, despite structural and membrane target differences, are sufficient to trigger respiratory allergies. Perforations in airway epithelial cells initiate allergic responses through two mechanisms: one triggers IL-33 release, and the other involves Ca influx, which activates MAPK signalling and type 2 inflammatory gene expression. These findings provide insight into how type 2 immune responses detect common perturbations caused by structurally diverse stimuli. Targeting downstream signalling of epithelial perforation may open new avenues for treating respiratory allergies.
PubMed: 40739348
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09331-1
PDB entries with the same primary citation
Experimental method
ELECTRON MICROSCOPY (3.81 Å)
Structure validation

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