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1.
Cellular copper homeostasis requires transmembrane transport and compartmental trafficking while maintaining the cell essentially free of uncomplexed Cu2+/+. In bacteria, soluble cytoplasmic and periplasmic chaperones bind and deliver Cu+ to target transporters or metalloenzymes. Transmembrane Cu+-ATPases couple the hydrolysis of ATP to the efflux of cytoplasmic Cu+. Cytosolic Cu+ chaperones (CopZ) interact with a structural platform in Cu+-ATPases (CopA) and deliver copper into the ion permeation path. CusF is a periplasmic Cu+ chaperone that supplies Cu+ to the CusCBA system for efflux to the extracellular milieu. In this report, using Escherichia coli CopA and CusF, direct Cu+ transfer from the ATPase to the periplasmic chaperone was observed. This required the specific interaction of the Cu+-bound form of CopA with apo-CusF for subsequent metal transfer upon ATP hydrolysis. As expected, the reverse Cu+ transfer from CusF to CopA was not observed. Mutation of CopA extracellular loops or the electropositive surface of CusF led to a decrease in Cu+ transfer efficiency. On the other hand, mutation of Met and Glu residues proposed to be part of the metal exit site in the ATPase yielded enzymes with lower turnover rates, although Cu+ transfer was minimally affected. These results show how soluble chaperones obtain Cu+ from transmembrane transporters. Furthermore, by explaining the movement of Cu+ from the cytoplasmic pool to the extracellular milieu, these data support a mechanism by which cytoplasmic Cu+ can be precisely directed to periplasmic targets via specific transporter-chaperone interactions.  相似文献   

2.
CopA, a thermophilic ATPase from Archaeoglobus fulgidus, drives the outward movement of Cu+ across the cell membrane. Millimolar concentration of Cys dramatically increases (≅ 800%) the activity of CopA and other PIB-type ATPases (Escherichia coli ZntA and Arabidopsis thaliana HMA2). The high affinity of CopA for metal (≅ 1 μM) together with the low Cu+-Cys KD (< 10− 10M) suggested a multifaceted interaction of Cys with CopA, perhaps acting as a substitute for the Cu+ chaperone protein present in vivo. To explain the activation by the amino acid and further understand the mechanism of metal delivery to transport ATPases, Cys effects on the turnover and partial reactions of CopA were studied. 2-20 mM Cys accelerates enzyme turnover with little effect on CopA affinity for Cu+, suggesting a metal independent activation. Furthermore, Cys activates the p-nitrophenyl phosphatase activity of CopA, even though this activity is metal independent. Cys accelerates enzyme phosphorylation and the forward dephosphorylation rates yielding higher steady state phosphoenzyme levels. The faster dephosphorylation would explain the higher enzyme turnover in the presence of Cys. The amino acid has no significant effect on low affinity ATP Km suggesting no changes in the E1 ↔ E2 equilibrium. Characterization of Cu+ transport into sealed vesicles indicates that Cys acts on the cytoplasmic side of the enzyme. However, the Cys activation of truncated CopA lacking the N-terminal metal binding domain (N-MBD) indicates that activation by Cys is independent of the regulatory N-MBD. These results suggest that Cys is a non-essential activator of CopA, interacting with the cytoplasmic side of the enzyme while this is in an E1 form. Interestingly, these effects also point out that Cu+ can reach the cytoplasmic opening of the access path into the transmembrane transport sites either as a free metal or a Cu+-Cys complex.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Cu+-ATPases are membrane proteins that couple the hydrolysis of ATP to the efflux of cytoplasmic Cu+. In cells, soluble chaperone proteins bind and distribute cytoplasmic Cu+, delivering the ion to the transmembrane metal-binding sites in the ATPase. The structure of Legionella pneumophila Cu+-ATPase (Gourdon, P., Liu, X. Y., Skjørringe, T., Morth, J. P., Møller, L. B., Pedersen, B. P., and Nissen, P. (2011) Nature 475, 59–64) shows that a kinked transmembrane segment forms a “platform” exposed to the cytoplasm. In addition, neighboring invariant Met, Asp, and Glu are located at the “entrance” of the ion path. Mutations of amino acids in these regions of the Archaeoglobus fulgidus Cu+-ATPase CopA do not affect ATPase activity in the presence of Cu+ free in solution. However, Cu+ bound to the corresponding chaperone (CopZ) could not activate the mutated ATPases, and in parallel experiments, CopZ was unable to transfer Cu+ to CopA. Furthermore, mutation of a specific electronegative patch on the CopZ surface abolishes the ATPase activation and Cu+ transference, indicating that the region is required for the CopZ-CopA interaction. Moreover, the data suggest that the interaction is driven by the complementation of the electropositive platform in the ATPase and the electronegative Cu+ chaperone. This docking likely places the Cu+ proximal to the conserved carboxyl and thiol groups in the entrance site that induce metal release from the chaperone via ligand exchange. The initial interaction of Cu+ with the pump is transient because Cu+ is transferred from the entrance site to transmembrane metal-binding sites involved in transmembrane translocation.  相似文献   

5.
P(1B)-type ATPases are polytopic membrane proteins that couple the hydrolysis of ATP to the efflux of cytoplasmic transition metals. This paper reviews recent progress in our understanding of the structure and function of these proteins in bacteria. These are members of the P-type superfamily of transport ATPases. Cu(+)-ATPases are the most frequently observed and best-characterized members of this group of transporters. However, bacterial genomes show diverse arrays of P(1B)-type ATPases with a range of substrates (Cu(+), Zn(2+), Co(2+)). Furthermore, because of the structural similarities among transitions metals, these proteins can also transport nonphysiological substrates (Cd(2+), Pb(2+), Au(+), Ag(+)). P(1B)-type ATPases have six or eight transmembrane segments (TM) with metal coordinating amino acids in three core TMs flanking the cytoplasmic domain responsible for ATP binding and hydrolysis. In addition, regulatory cytoplasmic metal binding domains are present in most P(1B)-type ATPases. Central to the transport mechanism is the binding of the uncomplexed metal to these proteins when cytoplasmic substrates are bound to chaperone and chelating molecules. Metal binding to regulatory sites is through a reversible metal exchange among chaperones and cytoplasmic metal binding domains. In contrast, the chaperone-mediated metal delivery to transport sites appears as a largely irreversible event. P(1B)-ATPases have two overarching physiological functions: to maintain cytoplasmic metal levels and to provide metals for the periplasmic assembly of metalloproteins. Recent studies have shown that both roles are critical for bacterial virulence, since P(1B)-ATPases appear key to overcome high phagosomal metal levels and are required for the assembly of periplasmic and secreted metalloproteins that are essential for survival in extreme oxidant environments.  相似文献   

6.
The Cu+‐ATPase CopA from Archaeoglobus fulgidus belongs to the P1B family of the P‐type ATPases. These integral membrane proteins couple the energy of ATP hydrolysis to heavy metal ion translocation across membranes. A defining feature of P1B‐1‐type ATPases is the presence of soluble metal binding domains at the N‐terminus (N‐MBDs). The N‐MBDs exhibit a conserved ferredoxin‐like fold, similar to that of soluble copper chaperones, and bind metal ions via a conserved CXXC motif. The N‐MBDs enable Cu+ regulation of turnover rates apparently through Cu‐sensitive interactions with catalytic domains. A. fulgidus CopA is unusual in that it contains both an N‐terminal MBD and a C‐terminal MBD (C‐MBD). The functional role of the unique C‐MBD has not been established. Here, we report the crystal structure of the apo, oxidized C‐MBD to 2.0 Å resolution. In the structure, two C‐MBD monomers form a domain‐swapped dimer, which has not been observed previously for similar domains. In addition, the interaction of the C‐MBD with the other cytoplasmic domains of CopA, the ATP binding domain (ATPBD) and actuator domain (A‐domain), has been investigated. Interestingly, the C‐MBD interacts specifically with both of these domains, independent of the presence of Cu+ or nucleotides. These data reinforce the uniqueness of the C‐MBD and suggest a distinct structural role for the C‐MBD in CopA transport. Proteins 2010. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

7.
The resistance nodulation division (RND)-type efflux systems are utilized in Gram-negative bacteria to export a variety of substrates. The CusCFBA system is the Cu+ and Ag+ efflux system in Escherichia coli, conferring resistance to lethal concentrations of Cu+ and Ag+. The periplasmic component, CusB, which is essential for the assembly of the protein complex, has Cu+ or Ag+ binding sites. The twelve-span membrane protein CusA is a homotrimeric transporter, and has a relatively large periplasmic domain. Here, we constructed the periplasmic domain of CusA by joining two DNA segments and then successfully expressed and purified the protein. Isothermal titration calorimetry experiments revealed Ag+ binding sites with Kds of 10−6–10−5 M. Our findings suggest that the metal binding in the periplasmic domain of CusA might play an important role in the function of the efflux pump.  相似文献   

8.
Cu+-ATPases are integral membrane proteins belonging to the IB subfamily of the P-type ATPases that couple Cu+ transport to the hydrolysis of ATP. As some structural and functional particularities arise for Cu+-ATPases, several authors suggest that some of the reaction steps of the Albers-Post model postulated for other P-ATPases may be different. In this work we describe a functional characterization of Legionella pneumophila Cu+-ATPase (LpCopA), the first PIB-ATPase whose structure was determined by X-ray crystallography. Cu+-ATPase activity of the enzyme presents a maximum at ~37 °C and pH 6.6–6.8. Phospholipids enhance LpCopA Cu+-ATPase activity in a non-essential mode where optimal activity is achieved at an asolectin molar fraction of 0.15 and an amphiphile-protein ratio of ~30,000. As described for other P-ATPases, Mg2+ acts as an essential activator. Furthermore, Cu+-ATPase activity dependence on [Cu+] and [ATP] can both be described by a sum of two hyperbolic functions. Based on that, and the [Cu+] and [ATP] dependencies of the best fitting parameters of the hyperbolae pointed above, we propose a minimal reaction scheme for the catalytic mechanism that shares the basic reaction steps of the Albers-Post model for P-type ATPases. The reaction scheme postulated contemplates two different binding affinities for a single ATP (apparent affinities of 0.66 and 550 μM at [Cu+] → ∞) and binding of at least 2 Cu+ with different affinities as well (apparent affinities of 1.4 and 102.5 μM at [ATP] → ∞).  相似文献   

9.
The cop operons of Helicobacter pylori and Helicobacter felis were cloned by gene library screening. Both operons contain open reading frames for a P-type ion pump (CopA) with homology to Cd2+ and Cu2+ ATPases and a putative ion binding protein (CopP), the latter representing a CopZ homolog of the copYZAB operon of Enterococcus hirae. The predicted CopA ATPases contained an N-terminal GMXCXXC ion binding motif and a membrane-associated CPC sequence. A synthetic N-terminal peptide of the H. pylori CopA ATPase bound to Cu2+ specifically, and gene disruption mutagenesis of CopA resulted in an enhanced growth sensitivity of H. pylori to Cu2+ but not to other divalent cations. As determined experimentally, H. pylori CopA contains four pairs of transmembrane segments (H1 to H8), with the ATP binding and phosphorylation domains lying between H6 and H7, as found for another putative transition metal pump of H. pylori (K. Melchers, T. Weitzenegger, A. Buhmann, W. Steinhilber, G. Sachs, and K. P. Schäfer, J. Biol. Chem. 271:446–457, 1996). The corresponding transmembrane segments of the H. felis CopA pump were identified by hydrophobicity analysis and via sequence similarity. To define functional domains, similarly oriented regions of the two enzymes were examined for sequence identity. Regions with high degrees of identity included the N-terminal Cu2+ binding domain, the regions of ATP binding and phosphorylation in the energy transduction domain, and a transport domain consisting of the last six transmembrane segments with conserved cysteines in H4, H6, and H7. The data suggest that H. pylori and H. felis employ conserved mechanisms of ATPase-dependent copper resistance.  相似文献   

10.
In bacteria, most Cu(+) -ATPases confer tolerance to Cu by driving cytoplasmic metal efflux. However, many bacterial genomes contain several genes coding for these enzymes suggesting alternative roles. Pseudomonas aeruginosa has two structurally similar Cu(+) -ATPases, CopA1 and CopA2. Both proteins are essential for virulence. Expressed in response to high Cu, CopA1 maintains the cellular Cu quota and provides tolerance to this metal. CopA2 belongs to a subgroup of ATPases that are expressed in association with cytochrome oxidase subunits. Mutation of copA2 has no effect on Cu toxicity nor intracellular Cu levels; but it leads to higher H(2) O(2) sensitivity and reduced cytochrome oxidase activity. Mutation of both genes does not exacerbate the phenotypes produced by single-gene mutations. CopA1 does not complement the copA2 mutant strain and vice versa, even when promoter regions are exchanged. CopA1 but not CopA2 complements an Escherichia coli strain lacking the endogenous CopA. Nevertheless, transport assays show that both enzymes catalyse cytoplasmic Cu(+) efflux into the periplasm, albeit CopA2 at a significantly lower rate. We hypothesize that their distinct cellular functions could be based on the intrinsic differences in transport kinetic or the likely requirement of periplasmic partner Cu-chaperone proteins specific for each Cu(+) -ATPase.  相似文献   

11.
Heavy metal pumps constitute a large subgroup in P‐type ion‐transporting ATPases. One of the outstanding features is that the nucleotide binding N‐domain lacks residues critical for ATP binding in other well‐studied P‐type ATPases. Instead, they possess an HP‐motif and a Gly‐rich sequence in the N‐domain, and their mutations impair ATP binding. Here, we describe 1.85 Å resolution crystal structures of the P‐ and N‐domains of CopA, an archaeal Cu+‐transporting ATPase, with bound nucleotides. These crystal structures show that CopA recognises the adenine ring completely differently from other P‐type ATPases. The crystal structure of the His462Gln mutant, in the HP‐motif, a disease‐causing mutation in human Cu+‐ATPases, shows that the Gln side chain mimics the imidazole ring, but only partially, explaining the reduction in ATPase activity. These crystal structures lead us to propose a role of the His and a mechanism for removing Mg2+ from ATP before phosphoryl transfer.  相似文献   

12.
P1B‐ATPases are among the most common resistance factors to metal‐induced stress. Belonging to the superfamily of P‐type ATPases, they are capable of exporting transition metal ions at the expense of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) hydrolysis. P1B‐ATPases share a conserved structure of three cytoplasmic domains linked by a transmembrane domain. In addition, they possess a unique class of domains located at the N‐terminus. In bacteria, these domains are primarily associated with metal binding and either occur individually or as serial copies of each other. Within this study, the roles of the two adjacent metal‐binding domains (MBDs) of CopA, the copper export ATPase of Escherichia coli were investigated. From biochemical and physiological data, we deciphered the protein‐internal pathway of copper and demonstrate the distal N‐terminal MBD to possess a function analogous to the metallochaperones of related prokaryotic copper resistance systems, that is its involvement in the copper transfer to the membrane‐integral ion‐binding sites of CopA. In contrast, the proximal domain MBD2 has a regulatory role by suppressing the catalytic activity of CopA in absence of copper. Furthermore, we propose a general functional divergence of tandem MBDs in P1B‐ATPases, which is governed by the length of the inter‐domain linker.  相似文献   

13.
P1B-type ATPases transport a variety of metals (Cd2+, Zn2+, Pb2+, Co2+, Cu2+, Ag+, Cu+) across biomembranes. Characteristic sequences CP[C/H/S] in transmembrane fragment H6 were observed in the putative transporting metal site of the founding members of this subfamily (initially named CPx-ATPases). In spite of their importance for metal homeostasis and biotolerance, their mechanisms of ion selectivity are not understood. Studies of better-characterized PII-type ATPases (Ca-ATPase and Na,K-ATPase) have identified three transmembrane segments that participate in ion binding and transport. Testing the hypothesis that metal specificity is determined by conserved amino acids located in the equivalent transmembrane segments of P1B-type ATPases (H6, H7, and H8), 234 P1B-ATPase protein sequences were analyzed. This showed that although H6 contains characteristic CPX or XPC sequences, conserved amino acids in H7 and H8 provide signature sequences that predict the metal selectivity in each of five P1B-ATPase subgroups identified. These invariant amino acids contain diverse side chains (thiol, hydroxyl, carbonyl, amide, imidazolium) that can participate in transient metal coordination during transport and consequently determine the particular metal selectivity of each enzyme. Each subgroup shares additional structural characteristics such as the presence (or absence) of particular amino-terminal metal-binding domains and the number of putative transmembrane segments. These differences suggest unique functional characteristics for each subgroup in addition to their particular metal specificity.  相似文献   

14.
The P-type ATPases translocate cations across membranes using the energy provided by ATP hydrolysis. CopA from Archaeoglobus fulgidus is a hyperthermophilic ATPase responsible for the cellular export of Cu+ and is a member of the heavy metal P1B-type ATPase subfamily, which includes the related Wilson and Menkes diseases proteins. The Cu+-ATPases are distinct from their P-type counter-parts in ion binding sequences, membrane topology, and the presence of cytoplasmic metal binding domains, suggesting that they employ alternate forms of regulation and novel mechanisms of ion transport. To gain insight into Cu+-ATPase function, the structure of the CopA ATP binding domain (ATPBD) was determined to 2.3 A resolution. Similar to other P-type ATPases, the ATPBD includes nucleotide binding (N-domain) and phosphorylation (P-domain) domains. The ATPBD adopts a closed conformation similar to the nucleotide-bound forms of the Ca2+-ATPase. The CopA ATPBD is much smaller and more compact, however, revealing the minimal elements required for ATP binding, hydrolysis, and enzyme phosphorylation. Structural comparisons to the AMP-PMP-bound form of the Escherichia coli K+-transporting Kdp-ATPase and to the Wilson disease protein N-domain indicate that the five conserved N-domain residues found in P1B-type ATPases, but not in the other families, most likely participate in ATP binding. By contrast, the P-domain includes several residues conserved among all P-type ATPases. Finally, the CopA ATPBD structure provides a basis for understanding the likely structural and functional effects of various mutations that lead to Wilson and Menkes diseases.  相似文献   

15.
Potassium or Na+ efflux ATPases, ENA ATPases, are present in all fungi and play a central role in Na+ efflux and Na+ tolerance. Flowering plants lack ENA ATPases but two ENA ATPases have been identified in the moss Physcomitrella patens, PpENA1 and PpENA2. PpENA1 mediates Na+ efflux in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. To propose a general function of ENA ATPases in bryophytes it was necessary to demonstrate that these ATPases mediate Na+ efflux in planta and that they exist in more bryophytes than P. patens. For these demonstrations (1) we cloned a third ATPase from P. patens, PpENA3, and studied the expression pattern of the three PpENA genes; (2) we constructed and studied the single and double Δppena1 and Δppena2 mutants; and (3) we cloned two ENA ATPases from the liverwort Marchantia polymorpha, MpENA1 and MpENA2, and expressed them in S. cerevisiae. The results from the first two approaches revealed that the expression of ENA ATPases was greatly enhanced at high pH and that Na+ efflux at high pH depended on PpENA1. The ENA1 ATPase of M. polymorpha suppressed the defective growth of a S. cerevisiae mutant at high K+ or Na+ concentrations, especially at high K+.  相似文献   

16.
CopA, a thermophilic ATPase from Archaeoglobus fulgidus, drives the outward movement of Cu(+) across the cell membrane. Millimolar concentration of Cys dramatically increases ( congruent with 800%) the activity of CopA and other P(IB)-type ATPases (Escherichia coli ZntA and Arabidopsis thaliana HMA2). The high affinity of CopA for metal ( congruent with 1 microM) together with the low Cu(+)-Cys K(D) (<10(-10)M) suggested a multifaceted interaction of Cys with CopA, perhaps acting as a substitute for the Cu(+) chaperone protein present in vivo. To explain the activation by the amino acid and further understand the mechanism of metal delivery to transport ATPases, Cys effects on the turnover and partial reactions of CopA were studied. 2-20 mM Cys accelerates enzyme turnover with little effect on CopA affinity for Cu(+), suggesting a metal independent activation. Furthermore, Cys activates the p-nitrophenyl phosphatase activity of CopA, even though this activity is metal independent. Cys accelerates enzyme phosphorylation and the forward dephosphorylation rates yielding higher steady state phosphoenzyme levels. The faster dephosphorylation would explain the higher enzyme turnover in the presence of Cys. The amino acid has no significant effect on low affinity ATP K(m) suggesting no changes in the E(1)<-->E(2) equilibrium. Characterization of Cu(+) transport into sealed vesicles indicates that Cys acts on the cytoplasmic side of the enzyme. However, the Cys activation of truncated CopA lacking the N-terminal metal binding domain (N-MBD) indicates that activation by Cys is independent of the regulatory N-MBD. These results suggest that Cys is a non-essential activator of CopA, interacting with the cytoplasmic side of the enzyme while this is in an E1 form. Interestingly, these effects also point out that Cu(+) can reach the cytoplasmic opening of the access path into the transmembrane transport sites either as a free metal or a Cu(+)-Cys complex.  相似文献   

17.
Cu homeostasis depends on a tightly regulated network of proteins that transport or sequester Cu, preventing the accumulation of this toxic metal while sustaining Cu supply for cuproproteins. In Rhodobacter capsulatus, Cu‐detoxification and Cu delivery for cytochrome c oxidase (cbb3‐Cox) assembly depend on two distinct Cu‐exporting P1B‐type ATPases. The low‐affinity CopA is suggested to export excess Cu and the high‐affinity CcoI feeds Cu into a periplasmic Cu relay system required for cbb3‐Cox biogenesis. In most organisms, CopA‐like ATPases receive Cu for export from small Cu chaperones like CopZ. However, whether these chaperones are also involved in Cu export via CcoI‐like ATPases is unknown. Here we identified a CopZ‐like chaperone in R. capsulatus, determined its cellular concentration and its Cu binding activity. Our data demonstrate that CopZ has a strong propensity to form redox‐sensitive dimers via two conserved cysteine residues. A ΔcopZ strain, like a ΔcopA strain, is Cu‐sensitive and accumulates intracellular Cu. In the absence of CopZ, cbb3‐Cox activity is reduced, suggesting that CopZ not only supplies Cu to P1B‐type ATPases for detoxification but also for cuproprotein assembly via CcoI. This finding was further supported by the identification of a ~150 kDa CcoI‐CopZ protein complex in native R. capsulatus membranes.  相似文献   

18.
Cells regulate copper levels tightly to balance the biogenesis and integrity of copper centers in vital enzymes against toxic levels of copper. PIB-type Cu+-ATPases play a central role in copper homeostasis by catalyzing the selective translocation of Cu+ across cellular membranes. Crystal structures of a copper-free Cu+-ATPase are available, but the mechanism of Cu+ recognition, binding, and translocation remains elusive. Through X-ray absorption spectroscopy, ATPase activity assays, and charge transfer measurements on solid-supported membranes using wild-type and mutant forms of the Legionella pneumophila Cu+-ATPase (LpCopA), we identify a sulfur-lined metal transport pathway. Structural analysis indicates that Cu+ is bound at a high-affinity transmembrane-binding site in a trigonal-planar coordination with the Cys residues of the conserved CPC motif of transmembrane segment 4 (C382 and C384) and the conserved Met residue of transmembrane segment 6 (M717 of the MXXXS motif). These residues are also essential for transport. Additionally, the studies indicate essential roles of other conserved intramembranous polar residues in facilitating copper binding to the high-affinity site and subsequent release through the exit pathway.  相似文献   

19.
P4-ATPases define a eukaryotic subfamily of the P-type ATPases, and are responsible for the transverse flip of specific lipids from the extracellular or luminal leaflet to the cytosolic leaflet of cell membranes. The enzymatic cycle of P-type ATPases is divided into autophosphorylation and dephosphorylation half-reactions. Unlike most other P-type ATPases, P4-ATPases transport their substrate during dephosphorylation only, i.e. the phosphorylation half-reaction is not associated with transport. To study the structural basis of the distinct mechanisms of P4-ATPases, we have determined cryo-EM structures of Drs2p-Cdc50p from Saccharomyces cerevisiae covering multiple intermediates of the cycle. We identify several structural motifs specific to Drs2p and P4-ATPases in general that decrease movements and flexibility of domains as compared to other P-type ATPases such as Na+/K+-ATPase or Ca2+-ATPase. These motifs include the linkers that connect the transmembrane region to the actuator (A) domain, which is responsible for dephosphorylation. Additionally, mutation of Tyr380, which interacts with conserved Asp340 of the distinct DGET dephosphorylation loop of P4-ATPases, highlights a functional role of these P4-ATPase specific motifs in the A-domain. Finally, the transmembrane (TM) domain, responsible for transport, also undergoes less extensive conformational changes, which is ensured both by a longer segment connecting TM helix 4 with the phosphorylation site, and possible stabilization by the auxiliary subunit Cdc50p. Collectively these adaptions in P4-ATPases are responsible for phosphorylation becoming transport-independent.  相似文献   

20.
Plasmid pl258 carries the cadA gene that confers resistance to cadmium, lead, and zinc. CadA catalyzes ATP-dependent cadmium efflux from cells of Staphylococcus aureus. It is a member of the superfamily of P-type ATPases and belongs to the subfamily of soft metal ion pumps. In this study the membrane topology of this P-type ATPase was determined by constructing fusions with the topological reporter genes phoA or lacZ. A series of 44 C-terminal truncated CadAs were fused with one or the other reporter gene, and the activity of each chimeric protein was determined. In addition, the location of the first transmembrane segment was determined by immunoblot analysis. The results are consistent with the pl258 CadA ATPase having eight transmembrane segments. The first 109 residues is a cytosolic domain that includes the Cys(X)2Cys motif that distinguishes soft metal ion-translocating P-type ATPases from their hard metal ion-translocating homologues. Another feature of soft metal ion P-type ATPases is the CysProCys motif, which is found in the sixth transmembrane segment of CadA. The phosphorylation site and ATP binding domain conserved in all P-type ATPases are situated within the large cytoplasmic loop between the sixth and seventh transmembrane segments.  相似文献   

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