1. Academic Validation
  2. Cholera toxin: an intracellular journey into the cytosol by way of the endoplasmic reticulum

Cholera toxin: an intracellular journey into the cytosol by way of the endoplasmic reticulum

  • Toxins (Basel). 2010 Mar;2(3):310-25. doi: 10.3390/toxins2030310.
Naomi L B Wernick 1 Daniel J-F Chinnapen Jin Ah Cho Wayne I Lencer
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 GI Cell Biology, Children's Hospital (and Harvard Medical School), Boston, MA, USA. Naomi.Wernick@childrens.harvard.edu
Abstract

Cholera toxin (CT), an AB(5)-subunit toxin, enters host cells by binding the ganglioside GM1 at the plasma membrane (PM) and travels retrograde through the trans-Golgi Network into the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). In the ER, a portion of CT, the enzymatic A1-chain, is unfolded by protein disulfide isomerase and retro-translocated to the cytosol by hijacking components of the ER associated degradation pathway for misfolded proteins. After crossing the ER membrane, the A1-chain refolds in the cytosol and escapes rapid degradation by the Proteasome to induce disease by ADP-ribosylating the large G-protein Gs and activating adenylyl cyclase. Here, we review the mechanisms of toxin trafficking by GM1 and retro-translocation of the A1-chain to the cytosol.

Keywords

ERAD; cholera toxin; lipid rafts; retro-translocation; retrograde pathway.

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