Abstract
Cholera toxin and heat-labile enterotoxin (LT) are structurally similar oligomeric proteins which are capable of being efficiently secreted from Vibrio cholerae. Here we report that these proteins transiently enter the periplasm of V. cholerae as they traverse the cell envelope to reach the extracellular milieu. Pulse-chase experiments on V. cholerae TRH7000 harboring an LT-encoding plasmid revealed that radiolabeled LT A and B subunits entered the periplasm rapidly, followed by their slow efflux (half-time, 13 min) into the medium. LT B-subunit efflux from the periplasm was calculated to be at a rate of ca. 170 monomers per min per cell (which is equivalent to 34 assembled LT holotoxin molecules per min per cell). These values were estimated to be sufficient to account for the increase in extracellular enterotoxin concentration during exponential cell growth. Thus, all enterotoxin subunits which are secreted into the medium can be assumed to be channelled via the periplasm. These findings led to an improved model of the pathway of toxin secretion by V. cholerae.