Elicitins, produced by most of the phytopathogenic
fungi of the genus Phytophthora, provoke in tobacco
both remote leaf necrosis and the induction of a resistance
against subsequent attack by various microorganisms. Despite
the recent description of the three-dimensional crystal
structure of cryptogein (CRY), the molecular basis of the
interactions between Phytophthora and plants largely
remains unknown. The X-ray crystal structure, refined
at 2.1 Å, of a ligand complexed, mutated CRY, K13H,
is reported. Analysis of this structure reveals that CRY
is able to encapsulate a ligand that induces only a minor
conformational change in the protein structure. The ligand
has been identified as an ergosterol by gas chromatographic
analysis coupled with mass spectrometry analysis. This
result is consistent with biochemical data that have shown
that elicitins are a distinct class of Sterol Carrier Proteins
(SCP). Data presented here provide the first structural
description of the pertinent features of the elicitin sterol
interaction and permit a reassessment of the importance
of both the key residue 13 and the mobility of the omega
loop for the accessibility of the sterol to the cavity.
The biological implications thereof are discussed. This
paper reports the first structure of a SCP/sterol complex.