Structure of tetanospasmin
Mechanism of action of tetanospasmin
Tetanus toxin is an extremely potent neurotoxin produced by the vegetative cell of Clostridium tetani[1] in anaerobic conditions, causing tetanus. It has no known function for clostridia in the soil environment where they are normally encountered. It is also called spasmogenic toxin, tetanospasmin or abbreviated to TeTx or TeNT. The LD50 of this toxin has been measured to be approximately 1 ng/kg, making it second only to Botulinum toxin D as the deadliest toxin in the world.[2] However, these tests are conducted solely on mice which may react differently to certain toxins than humans and other animals.[citation needed]
C. tetani also produces the exotoxin tetanolysin, a hemolysin, that causes destruction of tissues.[3]
Contents
- 1 Distribution
- 2 Structure
- 3 Mechanism
- 4 Clinical significance
- 5 Immunity and vaccination
- 6 References
- 7 External links
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Distribution
Tetanus toxin spreads through tissue spaces into the lymphatic and vascular systems. It enters the nervous system at the neuromuscular junctions and migrates through nerve trunks and into the central nervous system (CNS) by retrograde axonal transport by using dyneins.[4][5]
Structure
The tetanus toxin protein has a molecular weight of 150kDa. It is translated from the TetX gene as one protein which is subsequently cleaved into two parts: a 100kDa heavy or B-chain and a 50kDa light or A-chain. The chains are connected by a disulfide bond.
- The B-chain binds to dissialogangliosides (GD2 and GD1b) on the neuronal membrane and contains a translocation domain which aids the movement of the protein across that membrane and into the neuron.
- The A-chain, a zinc endopeptidase, attacks the vesicle-associated membrane protein (VAMP).
The TetX gene encoding this protein is located on the PE88 plasmid.[6]
The sequence of this protein has been deposited in Uniprot with accession P04958
Several structures of the binding domain and the peptidase domain have been solved by X-ray crystallography and deposited in the PDB. A summary of these structures is available using the UniPDB application at PDBe, for example 1z7h or 3hmy.
Mechanism
Tetanus toxin causes violent spastic paralysis by blocking the release of γ-aminobutyric acid. γ-aminobutyric acid is a neurotransmitter that inhibits motor neurons.[7]
The action of the A-chain stops the affected neurons from releasing the inhibitory neurotransmitters GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid) and glycine, but also excitatory transmitters,[8] by degrading the protein synaptobrevin 2.[9] The consequence of this is dangerous overactivity in the muscles from the smallest stimulus—the failure of inhibition of motor reflexes by sensory stimulation. This causes generalized contractions of the agonist and antagonist musculature, termed a tetanic spasm.
Clinical significance
Tetanic spasms can occur in a distinctive form called opisthotonos and be sufficiently severe to fracture long bones. The shorter nerves are the first to be inhibited, which leads to the characteristic early symptoms in the face and jaw, risus sardonicus and lockjaw.
The toxin bind to the neurons is irreversible[4] and nerve function can only be returned by the growth of new terminals and synapses.
Immunity and vaccination
Due to its extreme potency, even a lethal dose of tetanospasmin may be insufficient to provoke an immune response. Naturally-acquired tetanus infections thus do not usually provide immunity to subsequent infections. Immunization (which is impermanent and must be repeated periodically) instead utilizes the less deadly toxoid derived from the toxin, as in the tetanus vaccine and some combination vaccines such as DPT.
References
- ^ "tetanospasmin" at Dorland's Medical Dictionary
- ^ "Toxins of Biological Origin". http://www.ehs.ufl.edu/programs/bio/toxins/. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
- ^ Willey, Joanne (2009). Prescott's Principles of Microbiology. New York City, NY: McGraw-Hill. pp. 481. ISBN 978-0-07-337523-6.
- ^ a b Farrar JJ; Yen LM; Cook T; Fairweather N; Binh N; Parry J; Parry CM (September 2000). "Tetanus". Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry 69 (3): 292–301. doi:10.1136/jnnp.69.3.292. PMC 1737078. PMID 10945801. //www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1737078/.
- ^ AU Lalli G; Gschmeissner S; Schiavo G (November 15, 2003). "Myosin Va and microtubule-based motors are required for fast axonal retrograde transport of tetanus toxin in motor neurons". Journal of Cell Science 116 (Pt 22): 4639–50. doi:10.1242/jcs.00727. PMID 14576357.
- ^ Tetanus toxin: primary structure, expression in E. coli, and homology with botulinum toxins. Eisel U. et al EMBO J. 5:2495-2502(1986) PubMed: 3536478
- ^ Kumar, Vinay; Abbas, Abul K.; Fausto, Nelson; Aster, Jon (2009-05-28). Robbins and Cotran Pathologic Basis of Disease, Professional Edition: Expert Consult - Online (Robbins Pathology) (Kindle Locations 19359-19360). Elsevier Health. Kindle Edition.
- ^ Kanda K; Takano K (1983 February). "Effect of tetanus toxin on the excitatory and the inhibitory post-synaptic potentials in the cat motoneurone.". J Physiol. 335: 319–333. PMID 6308220.
- ^ Schiavo G; Benfenati F; Poulain B; Rossetto O; Polverino de Laureto P; DasGupta BR; Montecucco C (October 29, 1992). "Tetanus and botulinum-B neurotoxins block neurotransmitter release by proteolytic cleavage of synaptobrevin". Nature 359 (6398): 832–5. doi:10.1038/359832a0. PMID 1331807.
External links
- tetanospasmin at the US National Library of Medicine Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Toxins (enterotoxin · neurotoxin · hemotoxin · cardiotoxin · phototoxin)
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Bacterial toxins |
Exotoxin
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Gram positive
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Bacilli
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Clostridium: tetani (Tetanospasmin) · perfringens (Alpha toxin, Enterotoxin) · difficile (A, B) · botulinum (Botox)
other: Anthrax toxin · Listeriolysin O
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Cocci
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Streptolysin · Leukocidin (Panton-Valentine leukocidin) · Staphylococcus (Staphylococcus aureus alpha/beta/delta, Exfoliatin, Toxic shock syndrome toxin, SEB)
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Actinobacteria
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Cord factor · Diphtheria toxin
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Gram negative
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Shiga toxin · Verotoxin/shiga-like toxin (E. coli) · E. coli heat-stable enterotoxin/enterotoxin · Cholera toxin · Pertussis toxin · Pseudomonas exotoxin · Extracellular adenylate cyclase
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By mechanism
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type I (Superantigen) · type II (Pore-forming toxin) · type III (AB toxin/AB5)
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Endotoxin
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Lipopolysaccharide (Lipid A) · Bacillus thuringiensis delta endotoxin
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Virulence factor
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Clumping factor A · Fibronectin binding protein A
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Mycotoxins |
Aflatoxin · Amatoxin (alpha-amanitin, beta-amanitin, gamma-amanitin, epsilon-amanitin) · Citrinin · Cytochalasin · Ergotamine · Fumonisin (Fumonisin B1, Fumonisin B2) · Gliotoxin · Ibotenic acid · Muscimol · Ochratoxin · Patulin · Phalloidin · Sterigmatocystin · Trichothecene · Vomitoxin · Zeranol · Zearalenone
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Invertebrates |
arthropod: scorpion: Charybdotoxin, Maurotoxin, Agitoxin, Margatoxin, Slotoxin, Scyllatoxin, Hefutoxin, Lq2, Birtoxin, Bestoxin, BmKAEP, Phaiodotoxin · spider: Latrotoxin (Alpha-latrotoxin) · PhTx3 · Stromatoxin · Vanillotoxin · Huwentoxin
mollusca: Conotoxin · Eledoisin · Onchidal · Saxitoxin · Tetrodotoxin
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Vertebrates |
fish: Ciguatera · Tetrodotoxin
amphibian: (+)-Allopumiliotoxin 267A · Batrachotoxin · Bufotoxins (Arenobufagin, Bufotalin, Bufotenin · Cinobufagin, Marinobufagin) · Epibatidine · Histrionicotoxin · Pumiliotoxin 251D · Samandarin · Samandaridine · Tarichatoxin
reptile/snake venom: Bungarotoxin (Alpha-Bungarotoxin, Beta-Bungarotoxin) · Calciseptine · Taicatoxin · Calcicludine · Cardiotoxin III
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note: some toxins are produced by lower species and pass through intermediate species
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