Issue 39, 2015

Clostridium perfringens α-toxin interaction with red cells and model membranes

Abstract

The effects of Clostridium perfringens α-toxin on host cells have previously been studied extensively but the biophysical processes associated with toxicity are poorly understood. The work reported here shows that the initial interaction between the toxin and lipid membrane leads to measurable changes in the physical properties and morphology of the membrane. A Langmuir monolayer technique was used to assess the response of different lipid species to toxin. Sphingomyelin and unsaturated phosphatidylcholine showed the highest susceptibility to toxin lypolitic action, with a two stage response to the toxin (an initial, rapid hydrolysis stage followed by the insertion and/or reorganisation of material in the monolayer). Fluorescence confocal microscopy on unsaturated phosphatidylcholine vesicles shows that the toxin initially aggregates at discrete sites followed by the formation of localised “droplets” accumulating the hydrolysis products. This process is accompanied by local increases in the membrane dipole potential by about 50 (±42) mV. In contrast, red blood cells incubated with the toxin suffered a decrease of the membrane dipole potential by 50 (±40) mV in areas of high toxin activity (equivalent to a change in electric field strength of 107 V m−1) which is sufficient to affect the functioning of the cell membrane. Changes in erythrocyte morphology caused by the toxin are presented, and the early stages of interaction between toxin and membrane are characterised using thermal shape fluctuation analysis of red cells which revealed two distinct regimes of membrane-toxin interaction.

Graphical abstract: Clostridium perfringens α-toxin interaction with red cells and model membranes

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
14 Apr 2015
Accepted
17 Aug 2015
First published
18 Aug 2015

Soft Matter, 2015,11, 7748-7761

Author version available

Clostridium perfringens α-toxin interaction with red cells and model membranes

S. A. Jewell, R. W. Titball, J. Huyet, C. E. Naylor, A. K. Basak, P. Gologan, C. P. Winlove and P. G. Petrov, Soft Matter, 2015, 11, 7748 DOI: 10.1039/C5SM00876J

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