[No authors listed]
The FhuA protein of Escherichia coli K-12 transports ferrichrome and the structurally related antibiotic albomycin across the outer membrane and serves as a receptor for the phages T1, T5, and phi 80 and for colicin M. In this paper, we show that chimeric proteins consisting of the central part of FhuA and the N- and C-terminal parts of FhuE (coprogen receptor) or the N- and/or C-terminal parts of FoxA (ferrioxamine B receptor), function as ferrichrome transport proteins. Although the hybrid proteins contained the previously identified gating loop of FhuA, which is the principal binding site of the phages T5, T1, and phi 80, only the hybrid protein consisting of the N-terminal third of FoxA and the C-terminal two thirds of FhuA conferred weak phage sensitivity to cells. Apparently, the gating loop is essential, but not sufficient for wild-type levels of ferrichrome transport and for phage sensitivity. The properties of FhuA-FoxA hybrids suggest different regions of the two receptors for ferric siderophore uptake.
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