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1.
The glutamine/amino acid transporter solubilized from rat renal apical plasma membrane (brush-border membrane) with C12E8 and reconstituted into liposomes has been previously identified as the ASCT2 transporter. The reconstituted transporter catalyses an antiport reaction in which external glutamine and Na+ are cotransported in exchange with internal glutamine (or other amino acids). The glutamine-Na+ cotransport occurred with a 1:1 stoichiometry. The concentration of Na+ did not influence the Km for glutamine and vice versa. Experimental data obtained by a bi-substrate analysis of the glutamine-Na+ cotransport, together with previous report on the glutamineex/glutaminein pseudo bi-reactant analysis, indicated that the transporter catalyses a three-substrate transport reaction with a random simultaneous mechanism. The presence of ATP in the internal compartment of the proteoliposomes led to an increase of the Vmax of the transport and to a decrease of the Km of the transporter for external Na+. The reconstituted glutamine/amino acid transporter was inhibited by glutamate; the inhibition was more pronounced at acidic pH. A kinetic analysis revealed that the inhibition was competitive with respect to glutamine. Glutamate was also transported in exchange with glutamine. The external Km of the transporter for glutamate (13.3 mM) was slightly higher than the internal one (8.3 mM). At acidic pH the external but not the internal Km decreased. According with the Km values, glutamate should be transported preferentially from inside to outside in exchange for external glutamine and Na+.  相似文献   

2.
The glutamate transporter excitatory amino acid carrier 1 (EAAC1) catalyzes the co-transport of three Na+ ions, one H+ ion, and one glutamate molecule into the cell, in exchange for one K+ ion. Na+ binding to the glutamate-free form of the transporter generates a high affinity binding site for glutamate and is thus required for transport. Moreover, sodium binding to the transporters induces a basal anion conductance, which is further activated by glutamate. Here, we used the [Na+] dependence of this conductance as a read-out of Na+ binding to the substrate-free transporter to study the impact of a highly conserved amino acid residue, Thr101, in transmembrane domain 3. The apparent affinity of substrate-free EAAC1 for Na+ was dramatically decreased by the T101A but not by the T101S mutation. Interestingly, in further contrast to EAAC1WT, in the T101A mutant this [Na+] dependence was biphasic. This behavior can be explained by assuming that the binding of two Na+ ions prior to glutamate binding is required to generate a high affinity substrate binding site. In contrast to the dramatic effect of the T101A mutation on Na+ binding, other properties of the transporter, such as its ability to transport glutamate, were impaired but not eliminated. Our results are consistent with the existence of a cation binding site deeply buried in the membrane and involving interactions with the side chain oxygens of Thr101 and Asp367. A theoretical valence screening approach confirms that the predicted site of cation interaction has the potential to be a novel, so far undetected sodium binding site.  相似文献   

3.
Workshop 7: 2     
Glutamine, the preferred precursor for neurotransmitter glutamate, is likely to be the principal substrate for the neuronal System A transporter SAT1 in vivo. By measuring currents associated with SAT1 expression in Xenopus oocytes, we found that SAT1 mediates transport of small, neutral, aliphatic amino acids including glutamine, alanine and the System A‐specific analogue 2‐(methylamino) isobutyrate, each with K0.5 of 0.3–0.5 mm . Amino acid transport is driven by the Na+ electrochemical gradient. Kinetic data indicates that Na+/cotransport comprises the ordered binding first of Na+ (a voltage‐dependent step), then alanine, then simultaneous translocation. Li+ (but not H+) can substitute for Na+ but results in reduced Vmax. In the absence of amino acid, SAT1 mediates a cation leak with selectivity Na+, Li+, H+, K+. The temperature‐dependence of the leak current (Ea = 17 ± 3 kcal/mol) is consistent with carrier‐mediated Na+ uniport activity (cf 13 ± 2 kcal/mol for Na+/alanine cotransport) but the leak does not saturate at physiological [Na+], suggesting channel activity. Despite a Na+ Hill coefficient of 1, we obtained Na+/amino acid coupling coefficients greater than 1 from simultaneous measurement of charge and [3H]alanine or [3H]glutamine uptake. Interpretation of these data is model‐dependent and consistent with either (1) an all‐carrier model in which Na+/amino acid cotransport is thermodynamically coupled 2 : 1, cotransport is preferred over Na+ uniport, and in which there is little cooperativity between Na+ binding events, or (2) 1 : 1 coupling in parallel with an always‐on Na+ channel activity. In either scenario, the presence of SAT1 at the plasma membrane and resultant Na+ fluxes will place a significant energy burden on the cell.  相似文献   

4.
Na+-independent l-arginine uptake was studied in rabbit renal brush border membrane vesicles. The finding that steady-state uptake of l-arginine decreased with increasing extravesicular osmolality and the demonstration of accelerative exchange diffusion after preincubation of vesicles with l-arginine, but not d-arginine, indicated that the uptake of l-arginine in brush border vesicles was reflective of carrier-mediated transport into an intravesicular space. Accelerative exchange diffusion of l-arginine was demonstrated in vesicles preincubated with l-lysine and l-ornithine, but not l-alanine or l-proline, suggesting the presence of a dibasic amino acid transporter in the renal brush border membrane. Partial saturation of initial rates of l-arginine transport was found with extravesicular [arginine] varied from 0.005 to 1.0 mM. l-Arginine uptake was inhibited by extravesicular dibasic amino acids unlike the Na+-independent uptake of l-alanine, l-glutamate, glycine or l-proline in the presence of extravesicular amino acids of similar structure. l-Arginine uptake was increased by the imposition of an H+ gradient (intravesicular pH<extravesicular pH) and H+ gradient stimulated uptake was further increased by FCCP. These findings demonstrate membrane-potential-sensitive, Na+-independent transport of l-arginine in brush border membrane vesicles which differs from Na+-independent uptake of neutral and acidic amino acids. Na+-independent dibasic amino acid transport in membrane vesicles is likely reflective of Na+-independent transport of dibasic amino acids across the renal brush border membrane.  相似文献   

5.
MATE (multidrug and toxic compound extrusion) transporter proteins mediate metabolite transport in plants and multidrug resistance in bacteria and mammals. MATE transporter NorM from Vibrio cholerae is an antiporter that is driven by Na+ gradient to extrude the substrates. To understand the molecular mechanism of Na+‐substrate exchange, molecular dynamics simulation was performed to study conformational changes of both wild‐type and mutant NorM with and without cation bindings. Our results show that NorM is able to bind two Na+ ions simultaneously, one to each of the carboxylic groups of E255 and D371 in the binding pocket. Furthermore, this di‐Na+ binding state is likely more efficient for conformational changes of NorM_VC toward the inward‐facing conformation than single‐Na+ binding state. The observation of two Na+ binding sites of NorM_VC is consistent with the previous study that two sites for ion binding (denoted as Na1/Na2 sites) are found in the transporter LeuT and BetP, another two secondary transporters. Taken together, our findings shed light on the structure rearrangements of NorM on Na+ binding and enrich our knowledge of the transport mechanism of secondary transporters. Proteins 2014; 82:240–249. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

6.
A reevaluation of the specificity of system y+, the classical transporter for cationic amino acids is presented. System y+ has been defined as a transporter for cationic amino acids that binds neutral amino acids with lower affinity in the presence of Na+. The discovery of other transporters for cationic amino has suggested that some properties, originally attributed to system y+, may relate to other transport systems. Uncertainty concerns mainly, the affinity for neutral amino acids and the cation dependence of this interaction. Neutral amino acids (13 analogues tested) were found to bind to system y+ in human erythrocytes with very low affinity. Inhibition constants (Kiy, mm) ranged between 14.2 mm and >400 mm, and the strength of interaction was similar in the presence of Na+, K+ or Li+ (145 mm). In choline medium, no interaction was detected up to 20 mm of the neutral amino acid. Guanidinium ion (5 mm, osmolarity maintained with choline) potentiated neutral amino acid binding; the effect was most important in the case of l-norvaline which aligned with guanidinium ion is equivalent to arginine. This suggests cooperative interaction at the substrate site. The specificity of system y+ was shown to be clearly distinct from that of system y+L, a cationic amino acid transporter that accepts neutral amino acids with high affinity in the presence of Na+ and which influenced the classical definition of system y+. Received: 28 September 1998/Revised: 21 December 1998  相似文献   

7.
The Na+/K+-ATPase mediates electrogenic transport by exporting three Na+ ions in exchange for two K+ ions across the cell membrane per adenosine triphosphate molecule. The location of two Rb+ ions in the crystal structures of the Na+/K+-ATPase has defined two “common” cation binding sites, I and II, which accommodate Na+ or K+ ions during transport. The configuration of site III is still unknown, but the crystal structure has suggested a critical role of the carboxy-terminal KETYY motif for the formation of this “unique” Na+ binding site. Our two-electrode voltage clamp experiments on Xenopus oocytes show that deletion of two tyrosines at the carboxy terminus of the human Na+/K+-ATPase α2 subunit decreases the affinity for extracellular and intracellular Na+, in agreement with previous biochemical studies. Apparently, the ΔYY deletion changes Na+ affinity at site III but leaves the common sites unaffected, whereas the more extensive ΔKETYY deletion affects the unique site and the common sites as well. In the absence of extracellular K+, the ΔYY construct mediated ouabain-sensitive, hyperpolarization-activated inward currents, which were Na+ dependent and increased with acidification. Furthermore, the voltage dependence of rate constants from transient currents under Na+/Na+ exchange conditions was reversed, and the amounts of charge transported upon voltage pulses from a certain holding potential to hyperpolarizing potentials and back were unequal. These findings are incompatible with a reversible and exclusively extracellular Na+ release/binding mechanism. In analogy to the mechanism proposed for the H+ leak currents of the wild-type Na+/K+-ATPase, we suggest that the ΔYY deletion lowers the energy barrier for the intracellular Na+ occlusion reaction, thus destabilizing the Na+-occluded state and enabling inward leak currents. The leakage currents are prevented by aromatic amino acids at the carboxy terminus. Thus, the carboxy terminus of the Na+/K+-ATPase α subunit represents a structural and functional relay between Na+ binding site III and the intracellular cation occlusion gate.  相似文献   

8.
Excitatory amino acid transporters (EAATs) are crucial in maintaining extracellular levels of glutamate, the most abundant excitatory neurotransmitter, below toxic levels. The recent three-dimensional crystal structure of GltPh, an archaeal homolog of the EAATs, provides elegant structural details of this family of proteins, yet we know little about the mechanism of the bacterial transporter. Conflicting reports in the literature have described GltPh as an aspartate transporter driven by Na+ or a glutamate transporter driven by either Na+ or H+. Here we use purified protein reconstituted into liposomes to thoroughly characterize the ion and substrate dependence of the GltPh transport. We confirm that GltPh is a Na+-dependent transporter that is highly selective for aspartate over other amino acids, and we show that transport is coupled to at least two Na+ ions. In contrast to the EAATs, transport via GltPh is independent of H+ and K+. We propose a kinetic model of transport in which at least two Na+ ions are coupled to the cotransport of each aspartate molecule by GltPh, and where an ion- and substrate-free transporter reorients to complete the transport cycle.  相似文献   

9.
System y+L is a broad-scope amino acid transporter which binds and translocates cationic and neutral amino acids. Na+ replacement with K+ does not affect lysine transport, but markedly decreases the affinity of the transporter for l-leucine and l-glutamine. This observation suggests that the specificity of system y+L varies depending on the ionic composition of the medium. Here we have studied the interaction of the carrier with various amino acids in the presence of Na+, K+, Li+ and guanidinium ion. In agreement with the prediction, the specificity of system y+L was altered by the monovalent cations. In the presence of Na+, l-leucine was the neutral amino acid that interacted more powerfully. Elongation of the side chain (glycine - l-norleucine) strengthened binding. In contrast, bulkiness at the level of the β carbon was detrimental. In K+, the carrier behaved as a cationic amino acid specific carrier, interacting weakly with neutral amino acids. Li+ was found to potentiate neutral amino acid binding and in general the apparent affinities were higher than in Na+; elongation of the nonpolar side chain made a more important contribution to binding and the carrier was more tolerant towards β carbon substitution. Guanidinium stimulated the interaction of the carrier with neutral amino acids, but the effect was restricted to certain analogues (e.g., l-leucine, l-glutamine, l-methionine). Thus, in the presence of guanidinium, the carrier discriminates sharply among different neutral amino acids. The results suggest that the monovalent cations stabilize different carrier conformations. Received: 22 January 1996/Revised: 26 April 1996  相似文献   

10.
The glutamine transporter SLC38A3 (SNAT3) plays an important role in the release of glutamine from brain astrocytes and the uptake of glutamine into hepatocytes. It is related to the vesicular GABA (γ-aminobutyric acid) transporter and the SLC36 family of proton-amino acid cotransporters. The transporter carries out electroneutral Na+-glutamine cotransport-H+ antiport. In addition, substrate-induced uncoupled cation currents are observed. Mutation of asparagine 76 to glutamine or histidine in predicted transmembrane helix 1 abolished all substrate-induced currents. Mutation of asparagine 76 to aspartate rendered the transporter Na+-independent and resulted in a gain of a large substrate-induced chloride conductance in the absence of Na+. Thus, a single residue is critical for coupled and uncoupled ion flows in the glutamine transporter SNAT3. Homology modeling of SNAT3 along the structure of the related benzyl-hydantoin permease from Microbacterium liquefaciens reveals that Asn-76 is likely to be located in the center of the membrane close to the translocation pore and forms part of the predicted Na+ -binding site.The amino acid and auxin permease superfamily comprises a wide variety of transport proteins. In mammals, three distinct solute carrier families (SLC) belong to this superfamily, namely SLC32, SLC36, and SLC38 (1). Despite belonging to the same superfamily, the three solute carrier families have different transport mechanisms. The SLC32 family has only one member, the vesicular inhibitory amino acid transporter, which supposedly carries out a H+-GABA (γ-aminobutyric acid) antiport (2). The SLC36 family comprises four members, two of which have been characterized in more detail. These are the proton amino acid cotransporters 1 and 2 (PAT1 and 2) that carry out glycine and proline uptake in kidney and intestine and are mutated in iminoglycinuria (3, 4). The SLC38 family is comprised of 11 members, 5 of which have been characterized in more detail (5). Two different transport mechanisms are found within this family, namely the Na+-amino acid cotransporters SNAT1, SNAT2, and SNAT4 and the Na+-amino acid cotransporters-H+-antiporters SNAT3 and SNAT5. Transporters of the superfamily play a key role in inhibitory and excitatory neurotransmission, metabolite absorption, and liver metabolism. Despite their important roles in mammalian physiology, relatively little is known about the structure and function of these transporters.The activity of ion-coupled membrane transporters is frequently associated with currents which de- or hyperpolarize the cell membrane. These currents may be due to electrogenic transport stoichiometry and/or to a non-stoichiometric ion conductance (6). Transport-associated ion conductances have been identified in a number of transporters but have been particularly well studied in several Na+-coupled neurotransmitter transporters (711). Transport-associated conductances have also been observed in electroneutral transporters that do not carry out net charge movement (8, 1215). The glutamine transporter SNAT3, for instance, has a transport mechanism in which glutamine uptake is coupled to the cotransport of 1Na+ and the antiport of 1H+ and, hence, is unaffected by changes of the membrane potential (13, 16). Despite the electroneutral transport mechanism, substrate uptake is accompanied by inward currents, which are carried by cations below pH 7 and by protons at alkaline pH. In addition, a substrate-independent cation conductance and a Na+/H+ exchange activity has been observed (17). Non-stoichiometric currents can be mediated by the same ions that are involved in the coupled transport process, such as in the case of SNAT3, but may also be carried by different ions. Stoichiometric glutamate transport, for instance, involves Na+, H+, and K+ ions, whereas the glutamate transport-associated conductance is carried by chloride (18).A crucial question concerning transporter-associated ion conductances is whether the conducting pore coincides with the translocation pathway of the substrate and whether both use the same critical residues. In the case of the glutamate transporters, evidence has been presented suggesting that different residues are critical for the anion conductance than for substrate transport (19, 20) but that they all line the same pathway (21). Here we show that asparagine 76 of SNAT3 is critical for substrate-induced ion conductance and affects binding of the cosubstrate Na+. In addition we show that this residue is likely to be localized in the translocation pore in the center of the membrane.  相似文献   

11.
ASCT1 is a member of the glutamate transporter superfamily cloned from human brain and characterized as a Na+-dependent neutral amino-acid exchanger, which displays substrate-induced chloride-channel activity and mediates concentrative transport of alanine. Initial studies in ASCT1-expressing Xenopus laevis oocytes showed that proline did not elicit measurable currents, in contrast to what occurred with alanine, serine or cysteine, suggesting that proline was not an ASCT1 substrate, although it induced the release of alanine from preloaded oocytes. Here, we have studied the uptake of proline and hydroxyproline by ASCT1-expressing oocytes in order to investigate the ability of ASCT1 to translocate these imino acids. The results demonstrate ASCT1-mediated proline transport that is Na+-dependent, saturable, inhibited by the reported ASCT1 substrates as well as by hydroxyproline and can drive the imino acid against its concentration gradient. The apparent kinetic constants for the transport of alanine and the imino acids, obtained with oocytes from the same batch, showed maximal transport rate for proline and hydroxyproline to be half of that for alanine. However, K 0.5 for proline was 704 ± 86 µM, about three times higher than alanine K 0.5 (203.3 ± 36.4 µM), whereas hydroxyproline K 0.5 was 33.2 ± 4.3 µM, indicating that the hydroxylation on carbon 4 of proline strongly increases the affinity of ASCT1 for this proline derivative. In summary, the present work demonstrates for the first time the ability of ASCT1 to transport proline and hydroxyproline.  相似文献   

12.
Jing Li 《Biophysical journal》2009,97(11):L29-L31
The crystal structure of Na+-coupled galactose symporter (vSGLT) reports the transporter in its substrate-bound state, with a Na+ ion modeled in a binding site corresponding to that of a homologous protein, leucine transporter (LeuT). In repeated molecular dynamics simulations, however, we find the Na+ ion instable, invariably and spontaneously diffusing out of the transporter through a pathway lined by D189, which appears to facilitate the diffusion of the ion toward the cytoplasm. Further analysis of the trajectories and close structural examination, in particular, comparison of the Na+-binding sites of vSGLT and LeuT, strongly indicates that the crystal structure of vSGLT actually represents an ion-releasing state of the transporter. The observed dynamics of the Na+ ion, in contrast to the substrate, also suggests that the cytoplasmic release of the Na+ ion precedes that of the substrate, thus shedding light on a key step in the transport cycle of this secondary transporter.  相似文献   

13.
Constanta Ganea 《BBA》2009,1787(6):706-23581
A comparative review of the electrophysiological characterization of selected secondary active transporters from Escherichia coli is presented. In melibiose permease MelB and the Na+/proline carrier PutP pre-steady-state charge displacements can be assigned to an electrogenic conformational transition associated with the substrate release process. In both transporters cytoplasmic release of the sugar or the amino acid as well as release of the coupling cation are associated with a charge displacement. This suggests a common transport mechanism for both transporters. In the NhaA Na+/H+ exchanger charge translocation due to its steady-state transport activity is observed. A new model is proposed for pH regulation of NhaA that is based on coupled Na+ and H+ equilibrium binding.  相似文献   

14.
Membrane transport carrier function, its regulation and coupling to metabolism, can be selectively investigated dissociated from metabolism and in the presence of a defined electrochemical ion gradient driving force, using the single internal compartment system provided by vesiculated surface membranes. Vesicles isolated from nontransformed and Simian virus 40-transformed mouse fibroblast cultures catalyzed carrier-mediated transport of several neutral amino acids into an osmotically-sensitive intravesicular space without detectable metabolic conversion of substrate. When a Na+ gradient, external Na+ > internal Na+, was artifically imposed across vesicle membranes, accumulation of several neutral amino acids achieved apparent intravesicular concentrations 6- to 9-fold above their external concentrations. Na+-stimulated alanine transport activity accompanied plasma membrane material during subcellular fractionation procedures. Competitive interactions among several neutral amino acids for Na+-stimulated transport into vesicles and inactivation studies indicated that at least 3 separate transport systems with specificity properties previously defined for neutral amino acid transport in Ehrlich ascites cells were functional in vesicles from mouse fibroblasts: the A system, the L system and a glycine transport system. The pH profiles and apparent Km values for alanine and 2-aminoisobutyric acid transport into vesicles were those expected of components of the corresponding cellular uptake system. Several observations indicated that both a Na+ chemical concentration gradient and an electrical membrane potential contribute to the total driving force for active amino acid transport via the A system and the glycine system. Both the initial rate and quasi-steady-state of accumulation were stimulated as a function of increasing concentrations of Na+ applied as a gradient (external > internal) across the membrane. This stimulation was independent of endogenous Na+, K+-ATPase activity in vesicles and was diminished by monensin or by preincubation of vesicles with Na+. The apparent Km for transport of alanine and 2-aminoisobutyric acid was decreased as a function of Na+ concentration. Similarly, in the presence of a standard initial Na+ gradient, quasi-steady-state alanine accumulation in vesicles increased as a function of increasing magnitudes of interior-negative membrane potential imposed across the membrane by means of K+ diffusion potentials (internal > external) in the presence of valinomycin; the magnitude of this electrical component was estimated by the apparent distributions of the freely permeant lipophilic cation triphenylme thylphosphonium ion. Alanine transport stimulation by charge asymmetry required Na+ and was blocked by the further addition of either nigericin or external K+. As a corollary, Na+-stimulated alanine transport was associated with an apparent depolarization, detectable as an increased labeled thiocyanate accumulation. Permeant anions stimulated Na+-coupled active transport of these amino acids but did not affect Na+-independent transport. Translocation of K+, H+, or anions did not appear to be directly involved in this transport mechanism. These characteristics support an electrogenic mechanism in which amino acid translocation is coupled t o an electrochemical Na+ gradient by formation of a positively charged complex, stoichiometry unspecified, of Na+, amino acid, and membrane component. Functional changes expressed in isolated membranes were observed t o accompany a change in cellular proliferative state or viral transformation. Vesicles from Simian virus 40-transformed cells exhibited an increased Vmax of Na+-stimulated 2-aminoisobutyric acid transport, as well as an increased capacity for steady-state accumulation of amino acids in response t o a standard Na+ gradient, relative t o vesicles from nontransformed cells. Density-inhibition of nontransformed cells was associated with a marked decrease in these parameters assayed in vesicles. Several possibilities for regulatory interactions involving gradient-coupled transport systems are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Na+-Dependent transmembrane transport of small neutral amino acids, such as glutamine and alanine, is mediated, among others, by the neutral amino acid transporters of the solute carrier 1 [SLC1, alanine serine cysteine transporter 1 (ASCT1), and ASCT2] and SLC38 families [sodium-coupled neutral amino acid transporter 1 (SNAT1), SNAT2, and SNAT4]. Many mechanistic aspects of amino acid transport by these systems are not well-understood. Here, we describe a new photolabile alanine derivative based on protection of alanine with the 4-methoxy-7-nitroindolinyl (MNI) caging group, which we use for pre-steady-state kinetic analysis of alanine transport by ASCT2, SNAT1, and SNAT2. MNI-alanine has favorable photochemical properties and is stable in aqueous solution. It is also inert with respect to the transport systems studied. Photolytic release of free alanine results in the generation of significant transient current components in HEK293 cells expressing the ASCT2, SNAT1, and SNAT2 proteins. In ASCT2, these currents show biphasic decay with time constants, tau, in the 1-30 ms time range. They are fully inhibited in the absence of extracellular Na+, demonstrating that Na+ binding to the transporter is necessary for induction of the alanine-mediated current. For SNAT1, these transient currents differ in their time course (tau = 1.6 ms) from previously described pre-steady-state currents generated by applying steps in the membrane potential (tau approximately 4-5 ms), indicating that they are associated with a fast, previously undetected, electrogenic partial reaction in the SNAT1 transport cycle. The implications of these results for the mechanisms of transmembrane transport of alanine are discussed. The new caged alanine derivative will provide a useful tool for future, more detailed studies of neutral amino acid transport.  相似文献   

16.
KAAT1 is a lepidopteran neutral amino acid transporter belonging to the NSS super family (SLC6), which has an unusual cation selectivity, being activated by K+ and Li+ in addition to Na+. We have previously demonstrated that Asp338 is essential for KAAT1 activation by K+ and for the coupling of amino acid and driver ion fluxes. By comparing sequences of NSS family members, site-directed mutagenesis, and expression in Xenopus laevis oocytes, we identified Lys102 as a residue likely to interact with Asp338. Compared with wild type, the single mutants K102V and D338E each showed altered leucine uptake and transport-associated currents in the presence of both Na+ and K+. However, in K102V/D338E double mutant, the K102V mutation reversed both the inhibition of Na+-dependent transport and the block in K+-dependent transport that characterize the D338E mutant. K+-dependent leucine currents were not observed in any mutants with D338E. In the presence of the oxidant Cu(II) (1,10-phenanthroline)3, we observed specific and reversible inhibition of K102C/D338C mutant, but not of the corresponding single cysteine mutants, suggesting that these residues are sufficiently close to form a disulfide bond. Thus both structural and functional evidence suggests that these two residues interact. Similar results have been obtained mutating the bacterial transporter homolog TnaT. Asp338 corresponds to Asn286, a residue located in the Na+ binding site in the recently solved crystal structure of the NSS transporter LeuTAa (41). Our results suggest that Lys102, interacting with Asp338, could contribute to the spatial organization of KAAT1 cation binding site and permeation pathway. residue interaction; oxidants; tertiary structure  相似文献   

17.
Glutamate transporters maintain synaptic concentration of the excitatory neurotransmitter below neurotoxic levels. Their transport cycle consists of cotransport of glutamate with three sodium ions and one proton, followed by countertransport of potassium. Structural studies proposed that a highly conserved serine located in the binding pocket of the homologous GltPh coordinates l-aspartate as well as the sodium ion Na1. To experimentally validate these findings, we generated and characterized several mutants of the corresponding serine residue, Ser-364, of human glutamate transporter SLC1A2 (solute carrier family 1 member 2), also known as glutamate transporter GLT-1 and excitatory amino acid transporter EAAT2. S364T, S364A, S364C, S364N, and S364D were expressed in HEK cells and Xenopus laevis oocytes to measure radioactive substrate transport and transport currents, respectively. All mutants exhibited similar plasma membrane expression when compared with WT SLC1A2, but substitutions of serine by aspartate or asparagine completely abolished substrate transport. On the other hand, the threonine mutant, which is a more conservative mutation, exhibited similar substrate selectivity, substrate and sodium affinities as WT but a lower selectivity for Na+ over Li+. S364A and S364C exhibited drastically reduced affinities for each substrate and enhanced selectivity for l-aspartate over d-aspartate and l-glutamate, and lost their selectivity for Na+ over Li+. Furthermore, we extended the analysis of our experimental observations using molecular dynamics simulations. Altogether, our findings confirm a pivotal role of the serine 364, and more precisely its hydroxyl group, in coupling sodium and substrate fluxes.  相似文献   

18.
The uptake of glutamate in nerve synapses is carried out by the excitatory amino acid transporters (EAATs), involving the cotransport of a proton and three Na+ ions and the countertransport of a K+ ion. In this study, we use an EAAT3 homology model to calculate the pKa of several titratable residues around the glutamate binding site to locate the proton carrier site involved in the translocation of the substrate. After identifying E374 as the main candidate for carrying the proton, we calculate the protonation state of this residue in different conformations of EAAT3 and with different ligands bound. We find that E374 is protonated in the fully bound state, but removing the Na2 ion and the substrate reduces the pKa of this residue and favors the release of the proton to solution. Removing the remaining Na+ ions again favors the protonation of E374 in both the outward- and inward-facing states, hence the proton is not released in the empty transporter. By calculating the pKa of E374 with a K+ ion bound in three possible sites, we show that binding of the K+ ion is necessary for the release of the proton in the inward-facing state. This suggests a mechanism in which a K+ ion replaces one of the ligands bound to the transporter, which may explain the faster transport rates of the EAATs compared to its archaeal homologs.  相似文献   

19.
The uptake of glutamate in nerve synapses is carried out by the excitatory amino acid transporters (EAATs), involving the cotransport of a proton and three Na+ ions and the countertransport of a K+ ion. In this study, we use an EAAT3 homology model to calculate the pKa of several titratable residues around the glutamate binding site to locate the proton carrier site involved in the translocation of the substrate. After identifying E374 as the main candidate for carrying the proton, we calculate the protonation state of this residue in different conformations of EAAT3 and with different ligands bound. We find that E374 is protonated in the fully bound state, but removing the Na2 ion and the substrate reduces the pKa of this residue and favors the release of the proton to solution. Removing the remaining Na+ ions again favors the protonation of E374 in both the outward- and inward-facing states, hence the proton is not released in the empty transporter. By calculating the pKa of E374 with a K+ ion bound in three possible sites, we show that binding of the K+ ion is necessary for the release of the proton in the inward-facing state. This suggests a mechanism in which a K+ ion replaces one of the ligands bound to the transporter, which may explain the faster transport rates of the EAATs compared to its archaeal homologs.  相似文献   

20.
We report here on the cloning and functional characterization of the third subtype of amino acid transport system A, designated ATA3 (amino acid transporter A3), from a human liver cell line. This transporter consists of 547 amino acids and is structurally related to the members of the glutamine transporter family. The human ATA3 (hATA3) exhibits 88% identity in amino acid sequence with rat ATA3. The gene coding for hATA3 contains 16 exons and is located on human chromosome 12q13. It is expressed almost exclusively in the liver. hATA3 mediates the transport of neutral amino acids including α-(methylamino)isobutyric acid (MeAIB), the model substrate for system A, in a Na+-coupled manner and the transport of cationic amino acids in a Na+-independent manner. The affinity of hATA3 for cationic amino acids is higher than for neutral amino acids. The transport function of hATA3 is thus similar to that of system y+L. The ability of hATA3 to transport cationic amino acids with high affinity is unique among the members of the glutamine transporter family. hATA1 and hATA2, the other two known members of the system A subfamily, show little affinity toward cationic amino acids. hATA3 also differs from hATA1 and hATA2 in exhibiting low affinity for MeAIB. Since liver does not express any of the previously known high-affinity cationic amino acid transporters, ATA3 is likely to provide the major route for the uptake of arginine in this tissue.  相似文献   

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