Volume 270,
Number 6,
Issue of February 10, 1995 pp. 2483-2488
©1995 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
Epitope
Insertions Define Functional and Topological Features of the Escherichia coli Ferric Enterobactin Receptor
(Received for publication, June 9, 1994; and in revised form, October 18, 1994)
Sandra K.
Armstrong
,
Mark A.
McIntosh
The outer membrane protein FepA of Escherichia coli is
the receptor for the ferric enterobactin siderophore complex and
colicins B and D. A foreign antigenic determinant inserted into
selected FepA sites allowed mutational analysis of receptor function
and in situ immunological tracking of specific protein domains
with respect to the bacterial cell compartment. Immunoblot analysis of
bacterial proteins using an epitope-specific antibody detected the
peptide determinant in the receptor fusions. The impact of the
insertions on FepA function was examined by ferric
enterobactin-mediated iron uptake experiments and colicin sensitivity
tests. In all cases, FepA retained biological activity despite
introduction of the foreign sequence. To further develop the
topological model of FepA, the peptide-specific antibody was used to
localize epitope-carrying FepA domains in intact bacterial cells and
their isolated membranes. One epitope resided in a region on the
exterior of the cell, at the surface of the FepA protein, while other
epitopes appeared to be localized to the periplasm or within the outer
membrane.