About: AB toxin

An Entity of Type: protein, from Named Graph: http://dbpedia.org, within Data Space: dbpedia.org

The AB toxins are two-component protein complexes secreted by a number of pathogenic bacteria, though there is a pore-forming AB toxin found the eggs of a snail. They can be classified as Type III toxins because they interfere with internal cell function. They are named AB toxins due to their components: the "A" component is usually the "active" portion, and the "B" component is usually the "binding" portion. The "A" subunit possesses enzyme activity, and is transferred to the host cell following a conformational change in the membrane-bound transport "B" subunit. These proteins consist of two independent polypeptides, which correspond to the A/B subunit moieties. The enzyme component (A) enters the cell through endosomes produced by the oligomeric binding/translocation protein (B), and pr

Property Value
dbo:abstract
  • The AB toxins are two-component protein complexes secreted by a number of pathogenic bacteria, though there is a pore-forming AB toxin found the eggs of a snail. They can be classified as Type III toxins because they interfere with internal cell function. They are named AB toxins due to their components: the "A" component is usually the "active" portion, and the "B" component is usually the "binding" portion. The "A" subunit possesses enzyme activity, and is transferred to the host cell following a conformational change in the membrane-bound transport "B" subunit. These proteins consist of two independent polypeptides, which correspond to the A/B subunit moieties. The enzyme component (A) enters the cell through endosomes produced by the oligomeric binding/translocation protein (B), and prevents actin polymerisation through ADP-ribosylation of monomeric G-actin. Examples of the "A" component of an AB toxin include C. perfringens iota toxin Ia, C. botulinum C2 toxin CI, and Clostridium difficile ADP-ribosyltransferase. Other homologous proteins have been found in Clostridium spiroforme. An example of the B component of an AB toxin is Bacillus anthracis protective antigen (PA) protein, B. anthracis secretes three toxin factors: the protective antigen (PA); the oedema factor (EF); and the lethal factor (LF). Each is a thermolabile protein of ~80kDa. PA forms the "B" part of the exotoxin and allows passage of the "A" moiety (consisting of EF or LF) into target cells. PA protein forms the central part of the complete anthrax toxin, and translocates the A moiety into host cells after assembling as a heptamer in the membrane. The Diphtheria toxin also is an AB toxin. It inhibits protein synthesis in the host cell through phosphorylation of the eukaryotic elongation factor 2, which is an essential component for protein synthesis. The exotoxin A of Pseudomonas aeruginosa is another example of an AB toxin that targets the eukaryotic elongation factor 2. The AB5 toxins are usually considered a type of AB toxin, characterized by B pentamers. Less commonly, the term "AB toxin" is used to emphasize the monomeric character of the B component. The two-phase mechanism of action of AB toxins is of particular interest in cancer therapy research. The general idea is to modify the B component of existing toxins to selectively bind to malignant cells. This approach combines results from cancer immunotherapy with the high toxicity of AB toxins, giving raise to a new class of chimeric protein drugs, called immunotoxins. (en)
  • AB-toxin är toxin som består av två sammanbundna protein som samverkar. A-delen står för den toxiska effekten när den väl kommit in i cellen. B-delen är värdspecifik och är konstruerad på ett sätt som gör att den binder till en kolhydratstruktur på cellytan hos en viss cell och får den cellen att ta upp toxinet. Botulinumtoxin (världens giftigaste) och tetanustoxin (stelkramp) är två AB-toxin som har samma A-del men olika B-del. De har alltså samma effekt när de kommit in i cellen (de hindrar att neurotransmittorer frisätts) men drabbar olika celler i kroppen. Botulinumtoxin drabbar perifera nervändar och orsakar förlamning medan tetanustoxin drabbar inhibitoriska nervändar och orsakar kramper. (sv)
dbo:symbol
  • ADPrib_exo_Tox
  • Binary_toxB
dbo:thumbnail
dbo:wikiPageID
  • 20681039 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength
  • 8052 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
  • 1122602452 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbp:caption
  • crystal structure of the anthrax toxin protective antigen heptameric prepore (en)
  • crystal structure of the enzymatic component of iota-toxin from clostridium perfringens with nadh (en)
dbp:interpro
  • IPR003540 (en)
  • IPR003896 (en)
dbp:name
  • ADPrib_exo_Tox (en)
  • Binary_toxB (en)
dbp:pfam
  • PF03495 (en)
  • PF03496 (en)
dbp:pfamClan
  • CL0084 (en)
dbp:scop
  • 1 (xsd:integer)
dbp:symbol
  • ADPrib_exo_Tox (en)
  • Binary_toxB (en)
dbp:tcdb
  • 1 (xsd:integer)
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dcterms:subject
gold:hypernym
rdf:type
rdfs:comment
  • The AB toxins are two-component protein complexes secreted by a number of pathogenic bacteria, though there is a pore-forming AB toxin found the eggs of a snail. They can be classified as Type III toxins because they interfere with internal cell function. They are named AB toxins due to their components: the "A" component is usually the "active" portion, and the "B" component is usually the "binding" portion. The "A" subunit possesses enzyme activity, and is transferred to the host cell following a conformational change in the membrane-bound transport "B" subunit. These proteins consist of two independent polypeptides, which correspond to the A/B subunit moieties. The enzyme component (A) enters the cell through endosomes produced by the oligomeric binding/translocation protein (B), and pr (en)
  • AB-toxin är toxin som består av två sammanbundna protein som samverkar. A-delen står för den toxiska effekten när den väl kommit in i cellen. B-delen är värdspecifik och är konstruerad på ett sätt som gör att den binder till en kolhydratstruktur på cellytan hos en viss cell och får den cellen att ta upp toxinet. (sv)
rdfs:label
  • AB toxin (en)
  • AB-toxin (sv)
owl:sameAs
prov:wasDerivedFrom
foaf:depiction
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
is dbo:wikiPageDisambiguates of
is dbo:wikiPageRedirects of
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of
is foaf:primaryTopic of
Powered by OpenLink Virtuoso    This material is Open Knowledge     W3C Semantic Web Technology     This material is Open Knowledge    Valid XHTML + RDFa
This content was extracted from Wikipedia and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License