FhuA (MM 78.9 kDa) is an Escherichia coli outer membrane protein that transports iron coupled to ferrichrome and is the receptor for a number of bacteriophages and protein antibiotics. Its three-dimensional structure consists of a 22-stranded beta-barrel lodged in the membrane, extracellular hydrophilic loops, and a globular domain (the "cork") located within the beta-barrel and occluding it. This unexpected structure raises questions about the connectivity of the different domains and their respective roles in the different functions of the protein. To address these questions, we have compared the properties of the wild-type receptor to those of a mutated FhuA (FhuA Delta) missing a large part of the cork. Differential scanning calorimetry experiments on wild-type FhuA indicated that the cork and the beta-barrel behave as autonomous domains that unfold at 65 and 75 degrees C, respectively. Ferrichrome had a strong stabilizing effect on the loops and cork since it shifted the first transition to 71.4 degrees C. Removal of the cork destabilized the protein since a unique transition at 61.6 degrees C was observed even in the presence of ferrichrome. FhuA Delta showed an increased sensitivity to proteolysis and to denaturant agents and an impairment in phage T5 and ferrichrome binding.