Localization of the Glucosyltransferase Activity of Clostridium difficile Toxin B to the N-terminal Part of the Holotoxin*

(Received for publication, August 21, 1996, and in revised form, December 20, 1996)

Fred Hofmann , Christian Busch , Ulrike Prepens , Ingo Just and Klaus Aktories Dagger

From the Institut für Pharmakologie und Toxikologie der Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg, D-79104 Freiburg, Germany

ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
REFERENCES


ABSTRACT

Clostridium difficile toxin B that is one of the largest cytotoxins (270 kDa) known acts on Rho subfamily proteins by monoglucosylation (Just, I., Selzer, J., Wilm, M., von Eichel-Streiber, C., Mann, M., and Aktories, K. (1995) Nature 375, 500-503). By deletion analysis we identified the enzyme and cytotoxic activity of the toxin to be located at the N terminus of the holotoxin. A 63-kDa fragment of toxin B covering the first 546 amino acid residues glucosylated Rho, Rac, and Cdc42, but not Ras, by using UDP-glucose as a cosubstrate. As known for the holotoxin, glucosylation by the toxin fragment was favored with the GDP-bound form of the low molecular mass GTPases. Microinjection of the toxin fragment into NIH-3T3 cells induced rounding up of cells and redistribution of the actin cytoskeleton. In contrast, a toxin fragment encompassing the first 516 amino acid residues was at least 1000-fold less active than toxin fragment 1-546 and cytotoxically inactive. The data give direct evidence for location of the enzyme activity of C. difficile toxin B at the N-terminal 546 amino acids residues and indicate a functionally and/or structurally important role of the region from amino acid residues 516 through 546 for enzyme and cytotoxic activities.


INTRODUCTION

Clostridium difficile is suggested to be responsible for about 20% of cases of antibiotic-induced diarrhea and is presumably the most important pathogen for induction of pseudomembranous colitis associated with antibiotic therapy (1, 2). The major virulence factors of C. difficile are the enterotoxin A and the cytotoxin B (ToxB).1 Recently, it has been reported that the toxins are enzymes that covalently modify low molecular mass GTP-binding proteins of the Rho family by glucosylation (3-5). Using UDP-glucose as cosubstrate, the toxins specifically glucosylate Rho, Rac, and Cdc42 at threonine 37 and threonine 35, respectively, thereby inhibiting the biological activity of the small GTPases. Because Rho proteins are regulators of the actin cytoskeleton (6-8), glucosylation results in destruction of the cytoskeleton (3) and in inhibition of various signal transduction processes that are controlled by these GTPases (9).

Recently, the genes for C. difficile toxins were cloned and sequenced to show that they encode proteins of 308 and 270 kDa (10-12). From these data it has been proposed that the primary structures of these large toxins are characterized by three domains: the C-terminal part with repetitive oligopeptides suggested to be involved in receptor binding via glycoconjugates. The middle part has a rather small hydrophobic region and is tentatively assumed to be involved in membrane translocation (10, 12). Finally, it was speculated that the N terminus of the toxins including a putative nucleotide binding site bears the biological activity. This hypothesis was deduced from preliminary mutational studies showing that deletion of the C-terminal part or deletion of the middle part of ToxB reduced cytotoxicity but did not completely block the cytotoxic effects (13). However, no direct evidence for the location of cytotoxic activity at the N terminus has been presented. Because it is now clear that C. difficile toxins A and B are monoglucosyltransferases, we were prompted to localize their enzymatic activity to specific parts of the toxin molecule. Here we report that N-terminal fragments of ToxB that are expressed in Escherichia coli possess glucosyltransferase activity capable of modifying specifically small GTPases and cause potent cytotoxic effects after microinjection into culture cells.


EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Materials

UDP-[14C]hexoses were obtained from DuPont NEN (Dreieich, Germany). PCR primers were from Pharmacia (Freiburg, Germany). All other reagents were of analytical grade and purchased from commercial sources.

Purification of C. difficile ToxB

A dialysis bag containing 900 ml of 0.9% NaCl in a total volume of 4 liters of brain heart infusion was inoculated with 100 ml of an overnight brain heart infusion culture of C. difficile strain VPI 10463. After incubation under microaerophilic conditions at 37 °C for 72 h, the culture was centrifuged at 8000 × g for 20 min in a Sorvall GSA rotor. Ammonium sulfate was slowly added to the cleared culture filtrate to a final concentration of 70%. After 3 h of mixing at 4 °C, the suspension was centrifuged at 8000 × g for 30 min at 4 °C. The precipitate formed was dissolved in 15 ml of 0.05 M Tris-HCl buffer (pH 7.5) and dialyzed overnight at 4 °C against 1 liter of the Tris buffer. The dialyzed sample was cleared by centrifugation (8000 × g for 30 min at 4 °C) and directly applied to a MonoQ column (HR 10/10; Pharmacia, Freiburg, Germany) previously equilibrated with 0.05 M Tris-HCl buffer (pH 7.5). Proteins were eluted by using a 0.05 to 0.7 M NaCl gradient. ToxB eluted at about 0.5 M NaCl as a single protein peak (>90% pure) and was identified by cytotoxicity.2

PCR Amplification

C. difficile strain VPI 10463 was used as the source for preparation of chromosomal DNA as described previously (14). Amplification of the toxin fragments CDB1, CDB2, and CDB3 was performed by PCR with the GeneAmp PCR System 2400 from Perkin-Elmer using the primer pairs CDB1C/CDB1N (5'-AGATCTATGAGTTTAGTTAATAGAAAAC-3'/5'-GGATCCAAATCTTATACTAAATCCCT3') for CDB1, CDB2C/CDB2N (5'-AGATCTATTAATAAAGAAACTGGAGAAT-3'/5'-GGATCCAATAAAATCATTACCATCATT-3') for CDB2, and CDB3C/CDB3N (5'- AGATCTCTTATGTCAACTAGTGAAGA-3'/5'-GGATCCCTATTCACTAATCACTAATT-3') for CDB3, respectively.

Amplification was done with 300 nmol of primers, 250 ng of chromosomal DNA for 30 cycles (denaturation, 94 °C, 10 s; annealing, 48 °C, 30 s; elongation 68 °C, 3 min) in a total volume of 100 µl. The amplified DNA fragments were cleaved with BglII/BamHI and cloned in pGEX-2T (Pharmacia, Germany) expression vector.

C-terminal Truncation of CDB1

Further C-terminal deletions of CDB1 were done by restriction enzyme cleavage with BsaBI/EcoRI for CDB1-546, NheI/EcoRI for CDB1-516, and AflII/SmaI for CDB1-468. Religation of the resulting truncated fragments was performed after treatment with DNA polymerase I, large (Klenow) fragment.

Sequencing

Sequencing of CDB1 and all its truncated derivatives, CDB2, and CDB3 was done with the ABI PRISMTM dye terminator cycle sequencing ready reaction kit (Perkin-Elmer) to check both for correct cloning and mutations due to PCR amplification. Sequencing was performed at least twice with overlapping DNA fragments. Cycle sequencing revealed nucleotide exchanges in CDB1 at three positions, two of which resulted in amino acid exchanges (M substituted by I at position 1; Y substituted by C at position 55). These amino acid exchanges did not result in changes of enzyme activity.

Expression of Recombinant Proteins

The recombinant GTP-binding proteins RhoA, Rac, Cdc42, and Ha-Ras were prepared from their fusion proteins as described previously (4). The recombinant toxin fragments were expressed and purified as GST fusion proteins in accordance with the manufacturer's instructions. GST fusion proteins from the E. coli expression vector pGEX-2T were isolated by affinity chromatography with glutathione-Sepharose (Pharmacia, Germany) followed by cleavage of the toxin fragment proteins from the GST fusion protein by thrombin treatment (100 µg/ml for 30 min at 22 °C). Removal of thrombin was achieved by binding to benzamidine-Sepharose.

Microinjection Studies

For microinjection studies, NIH-3T3 cells were grown for 24 h in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum, 4 mM glutamine/penicillin/streptomycin and plated on Cellocate (Eppendorf, Germany) coverslips at about 105 cells/dish. Microinjection was performed with a Microinjector 5242 and Micromanipulator 5171 from Eppendorf. Actin cytoskeleton staining was performed with rhodamine-phalloidin after fixation of cells with paraformaldehyde (4%) plus Triton X-100 (0.2%).

Glucosylation Reaction

Rat brain tissue lysate (1 mg/ml) or recombinant GTP-binding proteins (30 µg/ml) were incubated with either ToxB (1 µg/ml) or recombinant toxin fragments (1-25 µg/ml) in a buffer containing 50 mM Hepes (pH 7.5), 100 mM KCl, 2 mM MgCl2, 100 µg/ml bovine serum albumin for 30 min at 37 °C. The total volume was 20 µl. For sequential glucosylation, GST-RhoA (1 µg) was glucosylated with either ToxB or CDB1 in the presence of unlabeled UDP-glucose (1.5 mM) for 30 min at 37 °C and washed three times. Thereafter, a second glucosylation in the presence of UDP-[14C]glucose (10 µM) and CDB1 (10 µg/ml) or ToxB (10 µg/ml) was performed for 10 min at 37 °C. Labeled proteins were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and subsequently by phosphorimaging (Molecular Dynamics, Inc.). For studies on the nucleotide dependence of glucosylation, RhoA was incubated for 15 min at room temperature in a buffer containing 150 mM NaCl, 50 mM Tris (pH 7.5), 2.5 mM Ca2+, 5 mM EDTA, 2.5 mM GDP or 2.5 mM GTP. Thereafter, MgCl2 was added to give 7 mM. Then, nucleotide-loaded Rho was glucosylated as described above.


RESULTS

To identify functional domains of the C. difficile toxin B, we first split the structural gene encoding the toxin B into three parts (CDB1, CDB2, CDB3) of almost similar length and engineered these fragments into an E. coli expression vector as described under "Experimental Procedures" (see also Fig. 1). As shown in Fig. 2A, the N-terminal part of ToxB (fragment CDB1) was able to glucosylate Rho subtype proteins in lysates of rat brain tissue as efficiently as the holotoxin. Deduced from previous studies, the upper band is most likely Rho while the lower band is Rac and Cdc42 (15). In contrast, the C-terminal part (CDB3) and the middle fragment (CDB2) of ToxB were without activity. To study whether the N-terminal fragment of ToxB modifies the same amino acid as the holotoxin, we first treated recombinant GST-Rho beads with the holotoxin or with fragment CDB1 in the presence of unlabeled UDP-glucose. Thereafter, the GST-Rho beads were washed and a second glucosylation was initiated by addition of either holotoxin or CDB1 plus labeled UDP-[14C]glucose. As shown in Fig. 2B, pretreatment of Rho with the holotoxin or with CDB1 prevented the second glucosylation reaction indicating that both the holotoxin and the toxin fragment modified the same amino acid residue (e.g. threonine 37 of Rho).


Fig. 1. Scheme of the primary structure C. difficile ToxB and of toxin fragments. The polypeptide repeats at the C terminus, the hydrophobic region (amino acids 956-1128) in the middle part of the toxin, the putative nucleotide binding region (amino acids 651-683), and the conserved cysteine residues are indicated. CDB1 (amino acids 1-900), CDB2 (amino acids 901-1750), and CDB3 (amino acids 1751-2366) are toxin fragments of 900, 850, and 616 amino acid residues, respectively. CDB1-546, enzymatically active N-terminal fragment of 546 amino acid residues. CDB1-516, N-terminal fragment of 516 amino acid residues. CDB1-468, N-terminal fragment of 468 amino acid residues. The region of 30 amino acid residues (amino acids 517-546), which deletion causes dramatic decrease in enzyme activity of CDB1-546, is indicated.
[View Larger Version of this Image (15K GIF file)]



Fig. 2. A, glucosylation of Rho subtype proteins in lysates of rat brain tissue by ToxB and by the toxin fragments CDB1, CDB2, and CDB3. Lysates of rat brain tissue (1 mg/ml) were incubated in the presence of ToxB (1 µg/ml) or toxin fragments CDB1, CDB2, and CDB3, respectively (about 5-20 µg) with UDP-[14C]glucose (10 µM) for 30 min. Thereafter, labeled proteins were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and phosphorimaging (shown). B, identification of the acceptor amino acid for glucosylation of Rho by toxin fragment CDB1 using the differential glucosylation method. GST-RhoA beads were first glucosylated in the presence of unlabeled UDP-glucose by ToxB (1 µg/ml, lane 2) and CDB1 (about 10 µg/ml, lane 3), respectively. Thereafter, GST-RhoA beads were washed and a second glucosylation was performed with CDB1 (lane 2) and ToxB (lane 3) in the presence of UDP-[14C]glucose. Control, recombinant GST-RhoA was glucosylated by ToxB (1 µg/ml) with UDP-[14C]glucose (lane 1). Then, labeled proteins were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and phosphorimaging (shown).
[View Larger Version of this Image (90K GIF file)]


Recently, it has been proposed that the region from amino acid residue 651 through 683 plays a pivotal role in cytotoxicity of ToxB (13). This region was suggested to be involved in nucleotide binding. Therefore, we studied the effects of deletion of this region on enzyme activity of fragment CDB1 of ToxB. We engineered a toxin fragment encompassing the first 546 amino acid residues but missing the proposed nucleotide-binding region (see Figs. 1 and 3). This toxin fragment (CDB1-546) was still able to glucosylate Rho proteins (Fig. 4). It was even more active than the holotoxin. At present we cannot conclude that the deletion activates ToxB because the difference in activity was rather small and the holotoxin and the toxin fragment were prepared by completely different procedures. When the active toxin fragment CDB1-546 was further deleted by 30 amino acid residues at the C terminus (Figs. 1 and 3), glucosyltransferase activity was dramatically decreased (Fig. 4). In the presence of Rho as substrate practically no glucosylation occurred (Fig. 4B). With Rac as substrate, a minor glucosylation was observed (Fig. 4A). However, the activity of CDB1-516 was more than 1000-fold less than the activity of CDB1-546. Further deletion resulting in a fragment of 468 amino acids (CDB1-468) caused complete loss of activity.


Fig. 3. Purified recombinant toxin fragments. The N-terminal toxin fragments CDB1-546, CDB1-516, and CDB1-468 were constructed as GST fusion proteins, expressed in E. coli, and purified by affinity chromatography and subsequent thrombin cleavage. GST fusion proteins of CDB1-546 (lane 1), CDB1-516 (lane 2), CDB1-468 (lane3); toxin fragments after thrombin cleavage of the fusion proteins, CDB1-546 (lane 4), CDB1-516 (lane 5), CDB1-468 (lane 6, upper band; lower band represents GST) (5 µg of protein were loaded on lanes 1-4 and lane 6; 2.5 µg of protein were loaded on lane 5).
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Fig. 4. Glucosylation of Rac1 (A) or RhoA (B) by the N-terminal toxin fragments CDB1-546, CDB1-516, and CDB1-468. A, time course of the glucosylation of Rac by N-terminal toxin B fragments. Rac (40 µg/ml) was incubated with ToxB (270 ng/ml = 1 nM, triangle ) or purified N-terminal toxin fragments CDB1-546 (32 µg/ml = 0.5 µM, bullet ; 63.4 ng/ml = 1 nM, open circle ), or CDB1-516 (30 µg/ml = 0.5 µM, black-down-triangle ) in the presence of UDP-[14C]glucose (10 µM) for the indicated times. Then, labeled proteins were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and phosphorimaging (given as the glucosylation in percent of maximal labeling which was 0.7 mol/mol). B, Rho protein (40 µg/ml) was incubated with N-terminal toxin fragments CDB1-546 (1.5 µM, lane 1), CDB1-516 (1.5 µM, lane 2), or CDB1-468 CDB1-468 (1.5 µM, lane 3) for 60 min. Thereafter, labeled proteins were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and phosphorimaging (shown).
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Similar to what was found with the holotoxin, the CDB1-546 fragment glucosylated Rho, Rac, and Cdc42 but not Ras proteins (Fig. 5A). Moreover, the cosubstrate specificity was the same as reported recently for the holotoxin (3). Thus, only UDP-glucose but not other activated monosaccharides such as UDP-galactose or UDP-N-acetylglucosamine were accepted as cosubstrates for modification of native Rho proteins in brain tissue lysates (Fig. 5B) or recombinant Rho proteins (not shown). Recently, it was reported that the GDP bound form of Rho proteins is the favored substrate for glucosylation by ToxB (3). In line with this report, we observed that the active toxin fragments (CDB1 and CDB1-546) glucosylated Rho in the GDP-bound form to a higher extent than in the GTP-bound form (Table I).


Fig. 5. A, protein substrate specificity of glucosylation by ToxB and CDB1-546. Recombinant Rho, Rac, Cdc42, and Ras (each 40 µg of protein/ml) were glucosylated by ToxB (1 µg/ml) and CDB1-546 (10 µg/ml) in the presence of UDP-[14C]glucose for 30 min. Then, labeled proteins were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and phosphorimaging (shown). B, cosubstrate specificity of glucosylation by ToxB and CDB1-546. Rat brain tissue lysates (1 mg/ml) were incubated with ToxB and CDB1-546, respectively, in the presence of UDP-[14C]glucose (UDP-Glc), UDP-[14C]galactose (UDP-Gal), and UDP-[14C]N-acetylglucosamine (UDP-GlcNAc) for 30 min. Thereafter, labeled proteins were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and phosphorimaging (shown).
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Table I.

Nucleotide dependency of the glucosylation of RhoA by ToxB or toxin fragments CDB1 and CDB1-546

Recombinant Rho A (1 µg) previously loaded with GDP or GTP was incubated with ToxB (1 µg/ml), toxin fragment CDB1 (10 µg/ml), and CDB1-546 (10 µg/ml), respectively, in the presence of UDP-[14C]glucose for 4 min. Thereafter, labeled proteins were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and subsequent phosphorimaging. Representative experiments, which were repeated with similar results are given in arbitrary phosphorimaging units.


Experiment Incorporation of [14C]glucose
ToxB CDB1 CDB1-546

arbitrary phosphorimaging units
Experiment I
  GDP 8.2 9.8 NDa
  GTP 3.9 3.7 ND
Experiment II
  GDP 14.5 ND 32.2
  GTP 5.8 ND 15.3

a ND, not determined.

Next we tested the biological activity of the toxin fragments by microinjection studies. For this purpose, the CDB1 fragment of C. difficile ToxB was microinjected into NIH-3T3 cells. About 30 min after microinjection into NIH-3T3 cells, morphological changes occurred. The cells rounded up in a manner typical for the action of C. difficile ToxB (Fig. 6). As shown by the rhodamine-phalloidin staining of the actin cytoskeleton (Fig. 6), the toxin fragment caused destruction of the actin microfilaments as observed after treatment of cells with the holotoxin. These cytotoxic effects were not detected after microinjection of the C-terminal part (CDB3) or the middle part (CDB2) of the toxin. Moreover, the same changes in cell morphology and destruction of the actin cytoskeleton were observed with the 63-kDa fragment CDB1-546 of ToxB (not shown) indicating that after microinjection this small N-terminal toxin fragment encompasses the cytotoxicity of the 270-kDa holotoxin.


Fig. 6. Microinjection of toxin fragment CDB1 into NIH-3T3 cells. NIH-3T3 cells were microinjected with toxin fragment CDB1 (10 µg/ml) or with the supernatant of the E. coli culture. After 3 h, cells were fixed, and the actin cytoskeleton was stained by rhodamine-phalloidin (shown; A, control; B, CDB1).
[View Larger Version of this Image (132K GIF file)]



DISCUSSION

Here we present direct evidence that the N-terminal part (amino acid residues 1-546) of C. difficile toxin B bears the enzyme activity of the holotoxin. Only in the presence of the N-terminal fragment, but not with the middle or C-terminal fragment of the toxin, were Rho subfamily proteins glucosylated. Glucosylation of Rho proteins by N-terminal toxin fragments exhibits the same biochemical characterization as glucosylation catalyzed by the holotoxin. First, the protein substrate specificity of the constructed N-terminal fragments (CDB1, CDB1-546) and of the holotoxin are the same showing modification of Rho subfamily proteins (Rho, Rac, Cdc42) but not of Ras. Second, modification of Rho by the toxin fragments occurs most likely at Thr-37 of Rho, because pretreatment with the holotoxin inhibits subsequent modification by fragment CDB1 and, conversely, glucosylation by CDB1 blocks subsequent modification by the holotoxin. Third, the GDP-bound form of the GTPase is the preferred substrate for glucosylation. The latter finding has been recently explained by conformational changes of Rho occurring upon GDP/GTP-binding. As deduced from the structure of Ras (16), in its GDP bound form, the hydroxyl group of Thr-37 is likely to be directed to the solvent and, therefore, accessible for glucosylation by the toxin. Finally, the cosubstrate of the toxin fragments CDB1 or CDB1-546 is UDP-glucose but not other activated monosaccharides. Thus, the N-terminal fragments of the C. difficile toxin B share the same enzymatic properties as the holotoxin. Further evidence for location of the biological activity of ToxB in the N-terminal part of the molecule is provided by microinjection studies. We show that the N-terminal part of the protein is responsible for the morphological changes caused by the holotoxin. These findings are also in line with recent reports that glucosylated Rho proteins per se are sufficient to induce cytotoxic effects (3).

Studies from past years indicate that bacterial toxins acting inside cells are constructed of three major domains (17-19), a cell surface binding site, a domain involved in membrane translocation, and a third part responsible for the biological activity. Accordingly, it has been suggested that the C terminus of C. difficile toxins, which is characterized by several repeating sequences, is involved in binding to the eukaryotic target cells (10, 12). The middle part of the toxins containing a hydrophobic region with putative membrane spanning regions was tentatively implicated in membrane translocation (20), and the N-terminal part was suggested to harbor the cytotoxic activity (13, 20). Our findings unequivocally locate the biological activity of the C. difficile toxins to the N terminus. Moreover, our studies largely extend our knowledge about the structure-activity relationship of ToxB. It has been proposed that a putative nucleotide binding region (amino acid residues 651-683) located in the N-terminal part of the toxin is essential for cytotoxicity (13). A change of His-653 to Glu reduced the cytotoxic action at least 100-fold (13). Here we show that this region is not essential for the glucosylation of Rho subfamily proteins and for induction of cytotoxic effects, because fragment CDB1-546 (amino acid residues 1-546), showing the same enzymatic and cytotoxic activities as the holotoxin, does not contain this region. Moreover, several cysteine residues highly conserved in C. difficile toxins have been suggested to be important for the cytotoxic action of the holotoxin. All these conserved cysteine residues were absent in the fragment CDB1-546, apparently without affecting its glucosyltransferase and cytotoxic activities. Thus, these cysteine residues are not crucial for the enzyme activity of ToxB, but may play a role in endocytosis or translocation of the toxin into the cytosol. However, a toxin fragment encompassing amino acid residues 1-516 did show at least 1000-fold reduced glucosyltransferase activity. Thus, the amino acid residues 517 through 546 appear to be essential for enzyme activity and/or structure of ToxB. Taken together, we show for the first time that the N-terminal part (546 amino acids) of the C. difficile ToxB harbors the enzyme and cytotoxic activities of the 270-kDa holotoxin. This finding will facilitate the precise structure-function analysis of the family of large cytotoxins including C. difficile toxins A and B, the lethal and hemorrhagic toxins of Clostridium sordellii, and the alpha -toxin of Clostridium novyi.


FOOTNOTES

*   This study was financially supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Ju 231/3-1, SFB 388) and the Fonds der Chemischen Industrie.The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Dagger    To whom correspondence should be addressed: Institut für Pharmakologie und Toxikologie, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg, Hermann-Herder-Str. 5, D-79104 Freiburg, Germany. Tel.: 0761-2035301; Fax: 0761-2035311; E-mail: aktories{at}ruf.uni-freiburg.de.
1   The abbreviations used are: ToxB, C. difficile toxin B; GST, glutathione S-transferase; CDB1, N-terminal C. difficile toxin B fragment of amino acid residues 1-900; CDB1-546, N-terminal C. difficile toxin B fragment of amino acid residues 1-546; CDB1-516, N-terminal C. difficile toxin B fragment of amino acid residues 1-516; CDB1-468, N-terminal C. difficile toxin B fragment of amino acid residues 1-468; CDB2, C. difficile toxin B fragment of amino acid residues 901-1750; CDB3, C-terminal C. difficile toxin B fragment of amino acid residues 1751-2366; PAGE, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; PCR, polymerase chain reaction.
2   F. Hofmann, C. Busch, U. Prepens, I. Just, and K. Aktories, manuscript in preparation.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

We thank B. Haag for excellent technical assistance.


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