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Dive into the research topics where Stephen L. Slatin is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephen L. Slatin.


Cell | 1990

A. T. cruzi-secreted protein immunologically related to the complement component C9 : evidence for membrane pore-forming activity at low pH

Norma W. Andrews; Charles K. Abrams; Stephen L. Slatin; Gareth Griffiths

Protozoan parasite T. cruzi invades cells within acidic vacuoles, but shortly afterward escapes into the cytosol. Exit from the phagosome is blocked by raising the pH of acidic compartments, suggesting that a previously described acid-active hemolysin secreted by T. cruzi might be involved in the membrane disruption process. Here we show that T. cruzi supernatants are cytotoxic for nucleated cells at pH 5.5 and contain a protein reactive with antibodies against reduced and alkylated human C9 (the ninth component of complement). The C9 cross-reactive protein (TC-TOX) copurified with the cytolytic activity, and the active fractions induced conductance steps characteristic of transmembrane ion channels in planar phospholipid bilayers. Immunocytochemical studies using antibodies against purified TC-TOX showed that the protein was localized to the luminal space of parasite-containing phagosomes. We postulate that TC-TOX, when secreted into the acidic environment of the phagosome, forms pores in the membrane, which contribute to its disruption.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1990

Delta-endotoxins form cation-selective channels in planar lipid bilayers

Stephen L. Slatin; Charles K. Abrams; Leigh English

Delta-endotoxins CryIA(c) and CryIIIA, two members of a large family of toxic proteins from Bacillus thuringiensis, were each allowed to interact with planar lipid bilayers and were analyzed for their ability to form ion-conducting channels. Both of these toxins made clearly resolved channels in the membranes and exhibited several conductance states, which ranged from 200 pS to about 4000 pS (in 300 mM KCl). The channels formed by both toxins were highly cation-selective, but not ideally so. The permeability ratio of K+ to Cl- was about 25 for both channels. The ability of these proteins to form such channels may account for their toxic action on sensitive cells, and suggests that this family of toxins may act by a common mechanism.


Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 1992

Mode of action of delta-endotoxins from Bacillus thuringiensis : a comparison with other bacterial toxins

Leigh English; Stephen L. Slatin

Delta-endotoxins are a class of insecticidal proteins produced by Bacillus thuringiensis. While there are many steps in the mode of action of these toxins, they ultimately interact with the insect midgut epithelium, binding and opening cation-selective channels. Delta-endotoxins form cation-selective channels in planar lipid bilayers, suggesting that these channels are responsible for toxicity. In order to be toxic, the required interaction of delta-endotoxins with the midgut epithelium must create a collection of physical-chemical events necessary for a tight association with the membrane, intercalation into the membrane, and formation of an open channel. These events are discussed in relation to the mode of action of other bacterial toxins.


Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 1994

Mode of action of CryIIA: a Bacillus thuringiensis delta-endotoxin

Leigh English; Helen Loidl Robbins; Michael A. von Tersch; Caroline A. Kulesza; Dirk Ave; Dolores Coyle; Christine S. Jany; Stephen L. Slatin

CryIIA is an effective insecticidal delta-endotoxin produced by several strains of Bacillus thuringiensis. Unlike CryI and CryIIIA-toxins that demonstrate some degree of saturable binding on the brush border of susceptible insects, neither saturable binding nor a saturable binding component was found for CryIIA on the midgut brush border of Helicoverpa zea. CryIIA did not dilute and block CryIA(c) binding, however, CryIA(c) effectively diluted CryIIA and stopped the initial binding of CryIIA to the brush border. These observations suggest that CryIIA and CryIA(c) toxins share a common component for binding on the midgut brush border. CryIIA formed voltage-dependent and not highly cation-selective channels in planar lipid bilayers unlike CryIA(c) and CryIIIA. Both CryIA(c) and CryIIA were stable in the digestive fluids of H. zea, but CryIIA was significantly less soluble than CryIA(c). Despite this difference in solubility, CryIIA arrested the feeding of third instar H. zea as rapidly as did CryIA(c), however, the onset of acute morbidity was delayed for CryIIA. Differences in solubility, binding, and ion channels formed by CryIIA toxin, resulted in reduced bioactivity against H. zea when compared with CryIA(c) but represent a unique mode of action among the delta endotoxins.


The Journal of Membrane Biology | 1997

Transmembrane insertion of the colicin Ia hydrophobic hairpin.

Paul K. Kienker; X. Q. Qiu; Stephen L. Slatin; Alan Finkelstein; Karen S. Jakes

Colicin Ia is a bactericidal protein that forms voltage-dependent, ion-conducting channels, both in the inner membrane of target bacteria and in planar bilayer membranes. Its amino acid sequence is rich in charged residues, except for a hydrophobic segment of 40 residues near the carboxyl terminus. In the crystal structure of colicin Ia and related colicins, this segment forms an α-helical hairpin. The hydrophobic segment is thought to be involved in the initial association of the colicin with the membrane and in the formation of the channel, but various orientations of the hairpin with respect to the membrane have been proposed. To address this issue, we attached biotin to a residue at the tip of the hydrophobic hairpin, and then probed its location with the biotin-binding protein streptavidin, added to one side or the other of a planar bilayer. Streptavidin added to the same side as the colicin prevented channel opening. Prior addition of streptavidin to the opposite side protected channels from this effect, and also increased the rate of channel opening; it produced these effects even before the first opening of the channels. These results suggest a model of membrane association in which the colicin first binds with the hydrophobic hairpin parallel to the membrane; next the hairpin inserts in a transmembrane orientation; and finally the channel opens. We also used streptavidin binding to obtain a stable population of colicin molecules in the membrane, suitable for the quantitative study of voltage-dependent gating. The effective gating charge thus determined is pH-independent and relatively small, compared with previous results for wildtype colicin Ia.


The Journal of Membrane Biology | 1985

Channels formed by colicin E1 in planar lipid bilayers are large and exhibit pH-dependent ion selectivity

Lynn A. Raymond; Stephen L. Slatin; Alan Finkelstein

SummaryThe E1 subgroup (E1, A, Ib, etc.) of antibacterial toxins called colicins are known to form voltage-dependent channels in planar lipid bilayers. The genes for colicins E1, A and Ib have been cloned and sequenced, making these channels interesting models for the widespread phenomenon of voltage dependence in cellular channels. In this paper we investigate ion selectivity and channel size—properties relevant to model building. Our major finding is that the colicin E1 channel is large, having a diameter ofat least 8 Å at its narrowest point. We established this from measurements of reversal potentials for gradients formed by salts of large cations or large anions. In so doing, we exploited the fact that the colicin channel is permeable to both cations and anions, and its relative selectivity to them is a functions and anions, and its relative selectivity to them is a function of pH. The channel is anion selective (Cl− over K+) in neutral membranes, and the degree of selectivity is highly dependent on pH. In negatively charged membranes, it becomes cation selective at pHs higher than about 5. Experiments with pH gradients cross the membrane suggest that titratable groups both within the channel lumen and near the channel ends affect the selectivity. Individual E1 channels have more than one open conductance state, all displaying comparable ion selectivity. Colicins A and Ib also exhibit pH-dependent ion selectivity, and appear to have even larger lumens than E1.


The Journal of Membrane Biology | 1986

Gating of a voltage-dependent channel (colicin E1) in planar lipid bilayers: the role of protein translocation

Stephen L. Slatin; Lynn A. Raymond; Alan Finkelstein

SummaryThe voltage-dependent channel formed in planar lipid bilayers by colicin E1, or its channel-forming C-terminal fragments, is susceptible to destruction by the nonspecific protease pepsin under well-defined conditions. In particular, pepsin acts only from thecis side (the side to which colicin has been added) and only upon channels in the closed state. Channels in the open state are refractory to destruction bycis pepsin, and neither open nor closed channels are destroyed bytrans pepsin. Colicin E1 channels are normally turned on bycis positive voltages and turned off bycis negative voltages. For large (>80 mV) positive voltages, however, channels inactivate subsequent to opening. Associated with the inactivated state, some channels become capable of being turned on bycis negative voltages and turned off bycis positive voltages, as if the channel-forming region of the molecule has been translocated across the membrane. Consistent with this interpretation is the ability now oftrans pepsin to destroy these “reversed” channels when they are closed, but not when they are open, whereascis pepsin has no effect on them in either the open or closed state. Our results indicate that voltage gating of the E1 channel involves translocation of parts of the protein across the membrane, exposing different domains to thecis andtrans solutions in the different channel states.


The Journal of Membrane Biology | 1986

Gating of a voltage-dependent channel (colicin E1) in planar lipid bilayers: translocation of regions outside the channel-forming domain

Lynn A. Raymond; Stephen L. Slatin; Alan Finkelstein; Qui-Rong Liu; Cyrus Levinthal

SummaryC-terminal fragments of colicin E1, ranging in mol wt from 14.5 to 20kD, form channels with voltage dependence and ion selectivity qualitatively similar to those of whole E1, placing an upper limit on the channel-forming domain. Under certain conditions, however, the gating kinetics and ion selectivity of channels formed by these different E1 peptides can be distinguished. The differences in channel behavior appear to be correlated with peptide length. Enzymatic digestion with trypsin of membrane-bound E1 peptides converts channel behavior of longer peptides to that characteristic of channels formed by shorter fragments. Apparently trypsin removes segments of protein N-terminal to the channel-forming region, since gating behavior of the shortest fragment is little affected by the enzyme. The success of this conversion depends on the side of the membrane to which trypsin is added and on the state, open or closed, of the channel. Trypsin modifies only closed channels from thecis side (the side to which protein has been added) and only open channels from thetrans side. These results suggest that regions outside the channel-forming domain affect ion selectivity and gating, and they also provide evidence that large protein segments outside the channel-forming domain are translocated across the membrane with channel gating.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Translocation of a functional protein by a voltage-dependent ion channel

Stephen L. Slatin; Angèle Nardi; Karen S. Jakes; Daniel Baty; Denis Duché

The voltage-dependent gating of the colicin channel involves a substantial structural rearrangement that results in the transfer of about 35% of the 200 residues in its pore-forming domain across the membrane. This transfer appears to represent an unusual type of protein translocation that does not depend on a large, multimeric, protein pore. To investigate the ability of this system to transport arbitrary proteins, we made use of a pair of strongly interacting proteins, either of which could serve as a translocated cargo or as a probe to detect the other. Here we show that both an 86-residue and a 134-residue hydrophilic protein inserted into the translocated segment of colicin A are themselves translocated and are functional on the trans side of the bilayer. The disparate features of these proteins suggest that the colicin channel has a general protein translocation mechanism.


The Journal of Membrane Biology | 2004

Gating movements of colicin A and colicin Ia are different.

Stephen L. Slatin; D. Duché; Paul K. Kienker; D. Baty

Both colicin A and colicin Ia belong to a subfamily of the bacterial colicins that act by forming a voltage-dependent channel in the inner membrane of target bacteria. Both colicin A and Ia open at positive and close at negative potential, but only colicin A exhibits distinctly biphasic turnoff kinetics, implying the existence of two open states. Previous work has shown that Colicin Ia gating is associated with the translocation of a region representing 4 of its alpha helices across the membrane. Also, if its C-terminal, channel-forming domain is detached from the other domains, its N-terminal alpha helix can now also cross the membrane, causing the conductance to drop by a factor of about 6. Colicin A gating also involves the translocation of an internal domain, but we find that its translocated domain is somewhat smaller than that of Ia. Furthermore, while its isolated C-terminal domain can also undergo a transition to a smaller conductance, the conductance change is only about 15%, and the transition does not involve the translocation of the N-terminal alpha helix. Trapping the N-terminus on the cis side prevents neither this small conductance transition nor the biphasic turn-off. So, while the gating of both channels involves large, currently inexplicable conformational changes, these motions are qualitatively different in the two proteins, which may be a reflection of the dissimilar kinetics of closing.

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Alan Finkelstein

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Karen S. Jakes

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Paul K. Kienker

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Charles K. Abrams

SUNY Downstate Medical Center

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Leigh English

North Dakota State University

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Denis Duché

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Daniel Baty

Aix-Marseille University

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Angèle Nardi

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Lynn A. Raymond

University of British Columbia

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