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Two-dimensional crystals of cholera toxin B-subunit-receptor complexes: projected structure at 17-A resolution.

David S. LudwigDepartments of Medicine and Medical Microbiology and 'Department of Cell Biology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305Hans O. RibiDepartments of Medicine and Medical Microbiology and 'Department of Cell Biology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305Gary K. SchoolnikDepartments of Medicine and Medical Microbiology and 'Department of Cell Biology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305Roger D. KornbergDepartments of Medicine and Medical Microbiology and 'Department of Cell Biology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305
1986en
ABI

Abstract

The B subunit of cholera toxin forms two-dimensional crystals when bound to its membrane receptor, ganglioside GM1, in phospholipid layers. A rectangular crystal lattice gives diffraction extending to 15-A resolution in negative stain, and image-processing of electron micrographs reveals a ring of five protein densities. The diameter of the central hole and the outer diameter of the ring are about 20 and 60 A, respectively. These data are consistent with a pentameric, doughnut-shaped structure of the B subunit that lies flat on a membrane surface. A hexagonal crystal lattice is obtained as well, and results of image processing and chemical crosslinking allow two interpretations: the B subunit may exist in both pentameric and hexameric forms or, more likely, the hexagonal lattice may represent a disordered or liquid crystalline form, in which a pentamer undergoes rotational averaging about its 5-fold axis.

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