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1.
In bacteria, ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters are vital for the uptake of nutrients and cofactors. Based on differences in structure and activity, ABC importers are divided into two types. Type I transporters have been well studied and employ a tightly regulated alternating access mechanism. Less is known about Type II importers, but much of what we do know has been observed in studies of the vitamin B12 importer BtuC2D2. MolB2C2 (formally known as HI1470/71) is also a Type II importer, but its substrate, molybdate, is ∼10-fold smaller than vitamin B12. To understand mechanistic differences among Type II importers, we focused our studies on MolBC, for which alternative conformations may be required to transport its relatively small substrate. To investigate the mechanism of MolBC, we employed disulfide cross-linking and EPR spectroscopy. From these studies, we found that nucleotide binding is coupled to a conformational shift at the periplasmic gate. Unlike the larger conformational changes in BtuCD-F, this shift in MolBC-A is akin to unlocking a swinging door: allowing just enough space for molybdate to slip into the cell. The lower cytoplasmic gate, identified in BtuCD-F as “gate I,” remains open throughout the MolBC-A mechanism, and cytoplasmic gate II closes in the presence of nucleotide. Combining our results, we propose a peristaltic mechanism for MolBC-A, which gives new insight in the transport of small substrates by a Type II importer.  相似文献   

2.
Putative metal-chelate-type ABC transporter HI1470/1 is homologous with vitamin B12 importer BtuCD but exhibits a distinct inward-facing conformation in contrast to the outward-facing conformation of BtuCD. Normal-mode analysis of HI1470/1 reveals the intrinsic asymmetric conformational flexibility in this transporter and demonstrates that the transition from the inward-facing to the outward-facing conformation is realized through the asymmetric motion of individual subunits of the transporter. This analysis suggests that the asymmetric arrangement of the BtuC dimer in the crystal structure of the BtuCD-F complex represents an intermediate state relating HI1470/1 and BtuCD. Furthermore, a twisting motion between transmembrane domains and nucleotide-binding domains encoded in the lowest-frequency normal mode of this type of importer is found to contribute to the conformational transitions during the whole cycle of substrate transportation. A more complete translocation mechanism of the BtuCD type importer is proposed.  相似文献   

3.
The nucleotide-induced structural rearrangements in ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporters, leading to substrate translocation, are largely unknown. We have modeled nucleotide binding and release in the vitamin B(12) importer BtuCD using perturbed elastic network calculations and biased molecular dynamics simulations. Both models predict that nucleotide release decreases the tilt between the two transmembrane domains and opens the cytoplasmic gate. Nucleotide binding has the opposite effect. The observed coupling may be relevant for all ABC transporters because of the conservation of nucleotide binding domains and the shared role of ATP in ABC transporters. The rearrangements in the cytoplasmic gate region do not provide enough space for B(12) to diffuse from the transporter pore into the cytoplasm, which could suggest that peristaltic forces are needed to exclude B(12) from the transporter pore.  相似文献   

4.
Solute transport via ATP binding cassette (ABC) importers involves receptor-mediated substrate binding, which is followed by ATP-driven translocation of the substrate across the membrane. How these steps are exactly initiated and coupled, and how much ATP it takes to complete a full transport cycle, are subject of debate. Here, we reconstitute the ABC importer GlnPQ in nanodiscs and in proteoliposomes and determine substrate-(in)dependent ATP hydrolysis and transmembrane transport. We determined the conformational states of the substrate-binding domains (SBDs) by single-molecule Förster resonance energy transfer measurements. We find that the basal ATPase activity (ATP hydrolysis in the absence of substrate) is mainly caused by the docking of the closed-unliganded state of the SBDs onto the transporter domain of GlnPQ and that, unlike glutamine, arginine binds both SBDs but does not trigger their closing. Furthermore, comparison of the ATPase activity in nanodiscs with glutamine transport in proteoliposomes shows that the stoichiometry of ATP per substrate is close to two. These findings help understand the mechanism of transport and the energy coupling efficiency in ABC transporters with covalently linked SBDs, which may aid our understanding of Type I ABC importers in general.  相似文献   

5.
Structure and mechanism of ABC transporters   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters facilitate unidirectional translocation of chemically diverse substrates across cell or organelle membranes. The recently determined crystal structures of the vitamin B(12) importer BtuCD and its cognate binding protein BtuF have revealed critical architectural features that are probably shared by other ABC transporters. For example, the arrangement of the ABC domains and their interface with the membrane-spanning domains are probably conserved, whereas the number of transmembrane helices and their arrangement are not. Two distinct mechanistic schemes for how ABC engines couple ATP hydrolysis to substrate transport have been proposed recently and are being explored.  相似文献   

6.
BtuCD is a type II ABC importer that catalyzes the translocation of vitamin B12 from the periplasm into the cytoplasm of Escherichia coli. Crystal structures of BtuCD and the related HiF (or Hi1470/71) protein from Haemophilus influenzae have revealed distinct conformations of the transmembrane domains that form inner and outer gates. We used electron spin resonance spectroscopy to study the reaction cycle of BtuCD after labeling the protein at residues located at these gates. The results suggest that BtuCD as a prototype type II ABC importer may have a mechanism that is distinct from that of ABC exporters such as Sav1866 or type I ABC importers such as those specific for molybdate (ModBC) or maltose (MalFGK).

Structured summary

MINT-6803800: btuF (uniprotkb: P37028), btuC (uniprotkb:P06609) and btuD (uniprotkb:P06611) physically interact (MI:0218) by molecular sieving (MI:0071)  相似文献   

7.
ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters constitute a large superfamily of integral membrane proteins that includes both importers and exporters. In recent years, several structures of complete ABC transporters have been determined by X-ray crystallography. These structures suggest a mechanism by which binding and hydrolysis of ATP by the cytoplasmic, nucleotide-binding domains control the conformation of the transmembrane domains and therefore which side of the membrane the translocation pathway is exposed to. A basic, conserved two-state mechanism can explain active transport of both ABC importers and ABC exporters, but various questions remain unresolved. In this article, I will review some of the crystal structures and the mechanistic insight gained from them. Future challenges for a better understanding of the mechanism of ABC transporters will be outlined.  相似文献   

8.
Weng J  Fan K  Wang W 《PloS one》2012,7(1):e30465
BtuCD is a member of the ATP-binding cassette transporters in Escherichia coli that imports vitamin B(12) into the cell by utilizing the energy of ATP hydrolysis. Crystal structures of BtuCD and its homologous protein HI1470/1 in various conformational states support the "alternating access" mechanism which proposes the conformational transitions of the substrate translocation pathway at transmembrane domain (TMD) between the outward-facing and inward-facing states. The conformational transition at TMD is assumed to couple with the movement of the cytoplasmic nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs) driven by ATP hydrolysis/binding. In this study, we performed targeted molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to explore the atomic details of the conformational transitions of BtuCD importer. The outward-facing to inward-facing (O→I) transition was found to be initiated by the conformational movement of NBDs. The subsequent reorientation of the substrate translocation pathway at TMD began with the closing of the periplasmic gate, followed by the opening of the cytoplamic gate in the last stage of the conformational transition due to the extensive hydrophobic interactions at this region, consistent with the functional requirement of unidirectional transport of the substrates. The reverse inward-facing to outward-facing (I→O) transition was found to exhibit intrinsic diversity of the conformational transition pathways and significant structural asymmetry, suggesting that the asymmetric crystal structure of BtuCD-F is an intermediate state in this process.  相似文献   

9.
Borths EL  Poolman B  Hvorup RN  Locher KP  Rees DC 《Biochemistry》2005,44(49):16301-16309
BtuCD is an ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporter that facilitates uptake of vitamin B(12) into the cytoplasm of Escherichia coli. The crystal structures of BtuCD and its cognate periplasmic binding protein BtuF have been recently determined. We have now explored BtuCD-F function in vitro, both in proteoliposomes and in various detergents. BtuCD reconstituted into proteoliposomes has a significant basal ATP hydrolysis rate that is stimulated by addition of BtuF and inhibited by sodium ortho-vanadate. When using different detergents to solubilize BtuCD, the basal ATP hydrolysis rate, the ability of BtuF to stimulate hydrolysis, and the extent to which sodium ortho-vanadate inhibits ATP hydrolysis all vary significantly. Reconstituted BtuCD can mediate transport of vitamin B(12) against a concentration gradient when coupled to ATP hydrolysis by BtuD in the liposome lumen and BtuF outside the liposomes. These in vitro studies establish the functional competence of the BtuCD and BtuF preparations used in the crystallographic analyses for both ATPase and transport activities. Furthermore, the tight binding of BtuF to BtuCD under the conditions studied suggests that the binding protein may not dissociate from the transporter during the catalytic cycle, which may be relevant to the mechanisms of other ABC transporter systems.  相似文献   

10.
Double electron-electron resonance is used here to investigate intermediates of the transport cycle of the Escherichia coli vitamin B12 ATP-binding cassette importer BtuCD-F. Previously, we showed the ATP-induced opening of the cytoplasmic gate I in TM5 helices, later confirmed by the AMP-PNP-bound BtuCD-F crystal structure. Here, other key residues are analyzed in TM10 helices (positions 307 and 322) and in the cytoplasmic gate II, i.e. the loop between TM2 and TM3 (positions 82 and 85). Without BtuF, binding of ATP induces detectable changes at positions 307 and 85 in BtuCD in liposomes. Together with BtuF, ATP triggers the closure of the cytoplasmic gate II in liposomes (reported by both positions 82 and 85). This forms a sealed cavity in the translocation channel in agreement with the AMP-PNP·BtuCD-F x-ray structure. When vitamin B12 and AMP-PNP are simultaneously present, the extent of complex formation is reduced, but the short 82–82 interspin distance detected indicates that the substrate does not affect the closed conformation of this gate. The existence of the BtuCD-F complex under these conditions is verified with spectroscopically orthogonal nitroxide and Gd(III)-based labels. The cytoplasmic gate II remains closed also in the vanadate-trapped state, but it reopens in the ADP-bound state of the complex. Therefore, we suggest that the substrate likely trapped in ATP·BtuCD-F can be released after ATP hydrolysis but before the occluded ADP-bound conformation is reached.  相似文献   

11.
ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters belong to one of the largest protein superfamilies that expands from prokaryotes to man. Recent x-ray crystal structures of bacterial and mammalian ABC exporters suggest a common alternating access mechanism of substrate transport, which has also been biochemically substantiated. However, the current model does not yet explain the coupling between substrate binding and ATP hydrolysis that underlies ATP-dependent substrate transport. In our studies on the homodimeric multidrug/lipid A ABC exporter MsbA from Escherichia coli, we performed cysteine cross-linking, fluorescence energy transfer, and cysteine accessibility studies on two reporter positions, near the nucleotide-binding domains and in the membrane domains, for transporter embedded in a biological membrane. Our results suggest for the first time that substrate binding by MsbA stimulates the maximum rate of ATP hydrolysis by facilitating the dimerization of nucleotide-binding domains in a state, which is markedly distinct from the previously described nucleotide-free, inward-facing and nucleotide-bound, outward-facing conformations of ABC exporters and which binds ATP.  相似文献   

12.
Basic architecture of ABC transporters includes two transmembrane domains (TMDs) and two nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs). Although the transport process takes place in the TMDs, which provide the substrate translocation pathway across the cell membrane and control its accessibility between the two sides of the membrane, the energy required for the process is provided by conformational changes induced in the NBDs by binding and hydrolysis of ATP. Nucleotide-dependent conformational changes in the NBDs, therefore, need to be coupled to structural changes in the TMDs. Using molecular dynamics simulations, we have investigated the structural elements involved in the conformational coupling between the NBDs and the TMDs in the Escherichia coli maltose transporter, an ABC importer for which an intact structure is available both in inward-facing and outward-facing conformations. The prevailing model of coupling is primarily based on a single structural motif, known as the coupling helices, as the main structural element for the NBD-TMD coupling. Surprisingly, we find that in the absence of the NBDs the coupling helices can be conformationally decoupled from the rest of the TMDs, despite their covalent connection. That is, the structural integrity of the coupling helices and their tight coupling to the core of the TMDs rely on the contacts provided by the NBDs. Based on the conformational and dynamical analysis of the simulation trajectories, we propose that the core coupling elements in the maltose transporter involve contributions from several structural motifs located at the NBD-TMD interface, namely, the EAA loops from the TMDs, and the Q-loop and the ENI motifs from the NBDs. These three structural motifs in small ABC importers show a high degree of correlation in motion and mediate the necessary conformational coupling between the core of TMDs and the helical subdomains of NBDs. A comprehensive analysis of the structurally known ABC transporters shows a high degree of conservation of the identified 3-motif coupling elements only in the subfamily of small ABC importers, suggesting a distinct mode of NBD-TMD coupling from the other two major ABC transporter folds, namely large ABC importers and ABC exporters.  相似文献   

13.
This chapter concentrates mainly on structural and mechanistic aspects of ABC (ATP-binding cassette) transporters and, as an example of the physiological significance of these proteins, on lipid transport, vitally important for human health. The chapter considers those aspects of ABC transporter function that appear reasonably well established, those that remain controversial and what appear to be emerging themes. Although we have seen dramatic progress in ABC protein studies in the last 20 years, we are still far from a detailed molecular understanding of function. Nevertheless two critical steps - capture and release of allocrites (transport substrates) involving a binding cavity in the membrane domain, and hydrolysis of ATP by the NBD (nucleotide-binding domain) dimer - are now described by persuasive and testable models: alternating access, and sequential firing of catalysis sites respectively. However, these need to be tested rigorously by more structural and biochemical studies. Other aspects considered include the level at which ATP binding and dimer activation are controlled, the nature of the power stroke delivering mechanical energy for transport, and some unexpected and intriguing differences between importers and exporters. The chapter also emphasizes that some ABC transporters, although important for elimination of toxic compounds (xenobiotics), are also increasingly seen to play crucial roles in homoeostatic regulation of membrane biogenesis and function through translocation of endogenous allocrites such as cholesterol. Another emerging theme is the identification of accessory domains and partners for ABC proteins, resulting in a corresponding widening of the range of activities. Finally, what are the prospects for translational research and ABC transporters?  相似文献   

14.
ABC transporters are ubiquitous membrane proteins that translocate solutes across biological membranes at the expense of ATP. In prokaryotic ABC importers, the extracytoplasmic anchoring of the substrate-binding protein (receptor) is emerging as a key determinant for the structural rearrangements in the cytoplasmically exposed ATP-binding cassette domains and in the transmembrane gates during the nucleotide cycle. Here the molecular mechanism of such signaling events was addressed by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy of spin-labeled ATP-binding cassette maltose transporter variants (MalFGK2-E). A series of doubly spin-labeled mutants in the MalF-P2 domain involving positions 92, 205, 239, 252, and 273 and one triple mutant labeled at positions 205/252 in P2 and 83 in the Q-loop of MalK were assayed. The EPR data revealed that the substrate-binding protein MalE is bound to the transporter throughout the transport cycle. Concomitantly with the three conformations of the ATP-binding cassette MalK2, three functionally relevant conformations are found also in the periplasmic MalF-P2 loop, strictly dependent on cytoplasmic nucleotide binding and periplasmic docking of liganded MalE to MalFG. The reciprocal communication across the membrane unveiled here gives first insights into the stimulatory effect of MalE on the ATPase activity, and it is suggested to be an important mechanistic feature of receptor-coupled ABC transporters.  相似文献   

15.
Bacterial ATP-binding cassette (ABC) importers are primary active transporters that are critical for nutrient uptake. Based on structural and functional studies, ABC importers can be divided into two distinct classes, type I and type II. Type I importers follow a strict alternating access mechanism that is driven by the presence of the substrate. Type II importers accept substrates in a nucleotide-free state, with hydrolysis driving an inward facing conformation. The ribose transporter in Escherichia coli is a tripartite complex consisting of a cytoplasmic ATP-binding cassette protein, RbsA, with fused nucleotide binding domains; a transmembrane domain homodimer, RbsC2; and a periplasmic substrate binding protein, RbsB. To investigate the transport mechanism of the complex RbsABC2, we probed intersubunit interactions by varying the presence of the substrate ribose and the hydrolysis cofactors, ATP/ADP and Mg2+. We were able to purify a full complex, RbsABC2, in the presence of stable, transition state mimics (ATP, Mg2+, and VO4); a RbsAC complex in the presence of ADP and Mg2+; and a heretofore unobserved RbsBC complex in the absence of cofactors. The presence of excess ribose also destabilized complex formation between RbsB and RbsC. These observations suggest that RbsABC2 shares functional traits with both type I and type II importers, as well as possessing unique features, and employs a distinct mechanism relative to other ABC transporters.  相似文献   

16.
Ivetac A  Campbell JD  Sansom MS 《Biochemistry》2007,46(10):2767-2778
ABC transporters are integral membrane proteins which couple the energy of ATP hydrolysis to the translocation of solutes across cell membranes. BtuCD is a approximately 1100-residue protein found in the inner membrane of Gram-negative bacteria which transports vitamin B12. Vitamin B12 is bound in the periplasm by BtuF, which delivers the solute to the periplasmic entrance of the transporter protein complex BtuCD. Molecular dynamics simulations of the BtuCD and BtuCDF complexes (in a lipid bilayer) and of the isolated BtuD and BtuF proteins (in water) have been used to explore the conformational dynamics of this complex transport system. Overall, seven simulations have been performed, with and without bound ATP, corresponding to a total simulation time of 0.1 micros. Binding of ATP drives closure of the nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs) in BtuD in a symmetrical fashion, but not in BtuCD. It seems that ATP constrains the flexibility of the NBDs in BtuCD such that their closure may only occur upon binding of BtuF to the complex. Upon introduction of BtuF, and concomitant with NBD association, one ATP-binding site displays a closure, while the opposite site remains relatively unchanged. This asymmetry may reflect an initial step in the "alternating hydrolysis" mechanism and is consistent with measurements of nucleotide-binding stoichiometries. Principal components analysis of the simulation of BtuCD reveals motions that are comparable to those suggested in current transport models.  相似文献   

17.
While there is evidence that other ABC transporters can tell between empty and loaded substrate binding protein, reconstitution experiments suggest otherwise for the Escherichia coli vitamin B12 importer BtuCD‐F. Here, we address the question of BtuCD‐F substrate sensitivity in a combined protein–protein docking and molecular dynamics simulation approach. Starting from the BtuCD and holo‐BtuF crystal structures, we model two holo‐BtuCD‐F docking complexes differing by a 180° orientation of BtuF. One of these is similar to the apo‐BtuCD‐F crystal structure. Both docking complexes were embedded in a lipid/water environment to investigate their dynamics and BtuCD's conformational response to the presence and absence of BtuF, vitamin B12, and Mg‐ATP in a series of 28 independent MD simulations. We find holo‐BtuF stabilizing the open conformation of BtuCD, whereas the transporter begins to close again when BtuF or vitamin B12 is removed—suggesting BtuCD‐F is capable of substrate sensitivity. We identified BtuC transmembrane helices 3 and 5, the L‐loops and the adjacent helices comprised of BtuC residues 170–180 as hotspots of conformational change. We propose the latter to act as substrate sensors. BtuF‐Trp44 appears to act as a lid on the vitamin B12 binding cleft in BtuF X‐ray structures and protrudes into the BtuCD transport channel in one of our simulations, which might represent an initial step in vitamin B12 uptake. On an average, we observe subunit motions where the nucleotide binding domains approach each other while the transmembrane domains display an opening trend toward the periplasm. Proteins 2010. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
Structure and mechanism of ABC transporter proteins   总被引:7,自引:1,他引:6  
ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters are ubiquitous membrane proteins that couple the transport of diverse substrates across cellular membranes to the hydrolysis of ATP. The crystal structures of four ABC transporters have recently been determined. They reveal similar arrangements of the conserved ATP-hydrolyzing nucleotide-binding domains, but unrelated architectures of the transmembrane domains, with the notable exception of a common 'coupling helix' that is essential for transmitting conformational changes. The structures suggest a mechanism that rationalizes ATP-driven transport: While binding of ATP appears to trigger an outward-facing conformation, dissociation of the hydrolysis products may promote an inward-facing conformation. This basic scheme can, in principle, explain nutrient import by ABC importers and drug extrusion by ABC exporters.  相似文献   

19.
Structural insights into ABC transporter mechanism   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters utilize the energy from ATP hydrolysis to transport substances across the membrane. In recent years, crystal structures of several ABC transporters have become available. These structures show that both importers and exporters oscillate between two conformations: an inward-facing conformation with the substrate translocation pathway open to the cytoplasm and an outward-facing conformation with the translocation pathway facing the opposite side of the membrane. In this review, conformational differences found in the structures of homologous ABC transporters are analyzed to understand how alternating-access is achieved. It appears that rigid-body rotations of the transmembrane subunits, coinciding with the opening and closing of the nucleotide-binding subunits, couples ATP hydrolysis to substrate translocation.  相似文献   

20.
ABC transporters: how small machines do a big job   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Transporters from the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) superfamily operate in all organisms, from bacteria to humans, to pump substances across biological membranes. Recent high-resolution views of ABC transporters in different conformational states provide clues as to how ATP might be used to drive the structural reorganizations that accompany membrane transport. Importantly, it now appears that a putative translocation pathway running through the center of the transporter might be gated alternately, either at the inside or the outside of the cytoplasmic membrane, coupling substrate translocation to a cycle of ATP-dependent conformational changes. ATP binding and ATP hydrolysis have distinct roles in this cycle: binding favors the outward-facing orientation, whereas hydrolysis returns the transporter to an inward-facing conformation.  相似文献   

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