S

S K Levengood

Duke Medical Center

Publishes on Bacterial Genetics and Biotechnology, Probiotics and Fermented Foods, RNA and protein synthesis mechanisms. 3 papers and 249 citations.

3Publications
249Total Citations

Is this you? Claim your profile.

Add your photo, update your bio, and get notified when your ranking changes.

Top publicationsby citations

TolA: a membrane protein involved in colicin uptake contains an extended helical region.
S K Levengood, Wayne F. Beyer, Robert E. Webster|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|1991
Cited by 158Open Access

The group A colicins and the DNA of many single-stranded filamentous bacteriophage are able to use combinations of the Tol proteins to gain entrance into or across the membrane of Escherichia coli. The TolA protein is a 421-amino acid residue integral membrane protein composed of three domains. Domain I, consisting of the amino-terminal 47 amino acids, contains a 21-residue hydrophobic segment that anchors the protein in the inner membrane. The remaining 374 amino acids, containing the other two domains, reside in the periplasmic space. Domain III, consisting of the carboxyl-terminal 120 residues, is considered to be the functional domain based on the location of the tolA592 deletion mutation. The internal 262 amino acids comprise domain II, which connects domains I and III together via short regions of polyglycine. It contains a large number of 3- to 5-residue polyalanine stretches, many of which have a repeat of the sequence Lys-Ala-Ala-Ala-(Glu/Asp). Circular dichroism analysis of different portions of TolA show domain II to be predominantly alpha-helical in structure while domain III contains approximately 10% helical structure.

Nucleotide sequences of the tolA and tolB genes and localization of their products, components of a multistep translocation system in Escherichia coli
S K Levengood, Robert E. Webster|Journal of Bacteriology|1989
Cited by 88Open Access

Various mutations in the tolQRAB gene cluster of Escherichia coli render the bacteria tolerant to high concentrations of the E, A, or K colicins as well as tolerant to infection by the single-stranded filamentous bacteriophage. The nucleotide sequence of a 2.8-kilobase fragment containing the tolA and tolB genes was determined. This sequence predicts TolA to be a 421-amino-acid protein of molecular mass 44,190 daltons. Studies using minicells show it to be associated with the inner membrane, presumably via a 21-amino-acid hydrophobic sequence between residues 13 and 35. The remaining 387 residues on the carboxyl side of this region are located in the periplasm. Within this region of TolA is a 230-residue portion that is predicted to form a very long helical segment. This region is rich in alanine, lysine, and glutamic and aspartic acids. The TolB protein is predicted to contain 431 amino acids. Localization studies using minicells show two proteins encoded by this open reading frame. The larger protein of 47.5 kilodaltons appears to be associated with the membrane fractions. The smaller protein is 43 kilodaltons in size and is found with the periplasmic components of the cell.