首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 78 毫秒
1.
One of the most interesting properties of the NhaA Na(+)/H(+) antiporter of Escherichia coli is the strong regulation of its activity by pH. This regulation is accompanied by a conformational change that can be probed by digestion with trypsin and involves the hydrophilic loop connecting the transmembrane helices VIII-IX. In the present work we show that a monoclonal antibody (mAb), 1F6, recognizes yet another domain of NhaA in a pH-dependent manner. This antibody binds NhaA at pH 8.5 but not at pH 4.5, whereas two other mAbs bind to NhaA independently of pH. The epitope of mAb 1F6 was located at the NH(2) terminus of NhaA by probing proteolytic fragments in Western blot analysis and amino acid sequencing. The antibody bound to the peptide HLHRFFSS, starting at the third amino acid of NhaA. A synthetic peptide with this sequence was shown to bind mAb 1F6 both at acidic and alkaline pH suggesting that this peptide is accessible to mAb 1F6 in the native protein only at alkaline pH. Although slightly shifted to acidic pH, the pH profile of the binding of mAb 1F6 to the antiporter is similar to that of both the Na(+)/H(+) antiporter activity as well as to its sensitivity to trypsin. We thus suggest that these pH profiles reflect a pH-dependent conformational change, which leads to activation of the antiporter. Indeed, a replacement of Gly-338 by Ser (G338S), which alleviates the pH dependence of both the NhaA activity as well as its sensitivity to trypsin, affects in a similar pattern the binding of mAb 1F6 to NhaA. Furthermore, the binding site of mAb 1F6 is involved in the functioning of the antiporter as follows: a double Cys replacement H3C/H5C causes an acidic shift by half a pH unit in the pH dependence of the antiporter; N-ethylmaleimide, which does not inhibit the wild-type protein, inhibits H3C/H5C antiporter to an extent similar to that exerted by mAb 1F6.  相似文献   

2.
A single Cys replacement of Glu at position 252 (E252C) in loop VIII-IX of NhaA increases drastically the Km for Na(+) (50-fold) of the Na(+)/H(+) antiporter activity of NhaA and shifts the pH dependence of NhaA activity, by one pH unit, to the alkaline range. In parallel, E252C causes a similar alkaline pH shift to the pH-induced conformational change of loop VIII-IX. Thus, although both the Na(+)/H(+) antiporter activity of wild type NhaA and its accessibility to trypsin at position Lys(249) in loop VIII-IX increase with pH between pH 6.5 and 7.5, the response of E252C occurs above pH 8. Furthermore, probing accessibility of pure E252C protein in dodecyl maltoside solution to 2-(4'-maleimidylanilino)-naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid revealed that E252C itself undergoes a pH-dependent conformational change, similar to position Lys(249), and the rate of the pH-induced conformational change is increased specifically by the presence of Na(+) or Li(+), the specific ligands of the antiporter. Chemical modification of E252C by N-ethylmaleimide, 2-(4'-maleimidylanilino)-naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid; [2-(trimethylammonium)ethyl]methane thiosulfonate, or (2-sulfonatoethyl)methanethiosulfonate reversed, to a great extent, the pH shift conferred by E252C but had no effect on the K(m) of the mutant antiporter.  相似文献   

3.
Na(+)/H(+) antiporters   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
  相似文献   

4.
Na(+)/H(+) antiporters are ubiquitous membrane proteins that are involved in homeostasis of H(+) and Na(+) throughout the biological kingdom. Corroborating their role in pH homeostasis, many of the Na(+)/H(+) antiporter proteins are regulated directly by pH. The pH regulation of NhaA, the Escherichia coli Na(+)/H(+) antiporter (EcNhaA), as of other, both eukaryotic and prokaryotic Na(+)/H(+) antiporters, involves a pH sensor and conformational changes in different parts of the protein that transduce the pH signal into a change in activity. Thus, residues that affect the pH response, the translocation or both activities cluster in separate domains along the antiporter molecules. Importantly, in the NhaA family, these domains are conserved. Helix-packing model of EcNhaA based on cross-linking data suggests, that in the three dimensional structure of NhaA, residues that affect the pH response may be in close proximity, forming a single pH sensitive domain. Therefore, it is suggested that, despite considerable differences in the primary structure of the antiporters from the bacterial NhaA to the mammalian NHEs, their three-dimensional architectures are conserved. Test of this possibility awaits the atomic resolution of the 3D structure of the antiporters.  相似文献   

5.
The crystal structure of Escherichia coli NhaA determined at pH 4 has provided insights into the mechanism of activity of a pH-regulated Na+/H+ antiporter. However, because NhaA is activated at physiological pH (pH 5.5–8.5), many questions related to the active state of NhaA have remained elusive. Our experimental results at physiological pH and computational analyses reveal that amino acid residues in transmembrane segment II contribute to the cation pathway of NhaA and its pH regulation: 1) transmembrane segment II is a highly conserved helix and the conserved amino acid residues are located on one side of the helix facing either the cytoplasmic or periplasmic funnels of NhaA structure. 2) Cys replacements of the conserved residues and measuring their antiporter activity in everted membrane vesicles showed that D65C, L67C, E78C, and E82C increased the apparent Km to Na+ and Li+ and changed the pH response of the antiporter. 3) Introduced Cys replacements, L60C, N64C, F71C, F72C, and E78C, were significantly alkylated by [14C]N-ethylmaleimide implying the presence of water-filled cavities in NhaA. 4) Several Cys replacements were modified by MTSES and/or MTSET, membrane impermeant, negatively and positively charged reagents, respectively, that could reach Cys replacements from the periplasm only via water-filled funnel(s). Remarkably, the reactivity of D65C to MTSES increased with increasing pH and chemical modification by MTSES but not by MTSET, decreased the apparent Km of the antiporter at pH 7.5 (10-fold) but not at pH 8.5, implying the importance of Asp65 negative charge for pH activation of the antiporter.  相似文献   

6.
NhaA, the Na(+)/H(+) antiporter of Escherichia coli, exists in the native membrane as a homodimer of which two monomers have been suggested to be attached by a beta-hairpin at the periplasmic side of the membrane. Constructing a mutant deleted of the beta-hairpin, NhaA/Delta(Pro(45)-Asn(58)), revealed that in contrast to the dimeric mobility of native NhaA, the mutant has the mobility of a monomer in a blue native gel. Intermolecular cross-linking that monitors dimers showed that the mutant exists only as monomers in the native membrane, proteoliposomes, and when purified in beta-dodecyl maltoside micelles. Furthermore, pull-down experiments revealed that, whereas as expected for a dimer, hemagglutinin-tagged wild-type NhaA co-purified with His-tagged NhaA on a Ni(2+)-NTA affinity column, a similar version of the mutant did not. Remarkably, under routine stress conditions (0.1 m LiCl, pH 7 or 0.6 m NaCl, pH 8.3), the monomeric form of NhaA is fully functional. It conferred salt resistance to NhaA- and NhaB-deleted cells, and whether in isolated membrane vesicles or reconstituted into proteoliposomes exhibited Na(+)/H(+) antiporter activity and pH regulation very similar to wild-type dimers. Remarkably, under extreme stress conditions (0.1 m LiCl or 0.7 m NaCl at pH 8.5), the dimeric native NhaA was much more efficient than the monomeric mutant in conferring extreme stress resistance.  相似文献   

7.
A functionally important, interface domain between transmembrane segments (TMSs) IV and XI of the NhaA Na+/H+ antiporter of Escherichia coli has been unraveled. Scanning by single Cys replacements identified new mutations (F136C, G125C, and A137C) that cluster in one face of TMS IV and increase dramatically the Km of the antiporter. Whereas G125C, in addition, causes a drastic alkaline shift to the pH dependence of the antiporter, G338C alleviates the pH control of NhaA. Scanning by double Cys replacements (21 pairs of one replacement per TMS) identified genetically eight pairs of residues that showed very strong negative complementation. Cross-linking of the double mutants identified six double mutants (T132C/G338C, D133C/G338C, F136C/S342C, T132C/S342C, A137C/S342C, and A137C/G338C) of which pronounced intramolecular cross-linking defined an interface domain between the two TMSs. Remarkably, cross-linking by a short and rigid reagent (N,N'-o-phenylenedimaleimide) revived the Li+/H+ antiport activity, whereas a shorter reagent (1,2-ethanediyl bismethanethiosulfonate) revived both Na+/H+ and Li+/H+ antiporter activities and even the pH response of the dead mutant T132C/G338C. Hence, cross-linking at this position restores an active conformation of NhaA.  相似文献   

8.
Na(+)/H(+) antiporters are ubiquitous membrane proteins and play an important role in cell homeostasis. We amplified a gene encoding a member of the monovalent cation:proton antiporter-2 (CPA2) family (TC 2.A.37) from the Thermus thermophilus genome and expressed it in Escherichia coli. The gene product was identified as a member of the NapA subfamily and was found to be an active Na(+)(Li(+))/H(+) antiporter as it conferred resistance to the Na(+) and Li(+) sensitive strain E. coli EP432 (DeltanhaA, DeltanhaB) upon exposure to high concentration of these salts in the growth medium. Fluorescence measurements using the pH sensitive dye 9-amino-6-chloro-2-methoxyacridine in everted membrane vesicles of complemented E. coli EP432 showed high Li(+)/H(+) exchange activity at pH 6, but marginal Na(+)/H(+) antiport activity. Towards more alkaline conditions, Na(+)/H(+) exchange activity increased to a relative maximum at pH 8, where by contrast the Li(+)/H(+) exchange activity reached its relative minimum. Substitution of conserved residues D156 and D157 (located in the putative transmembrane helix 6) with Ala resulted in the complete loss of Na(+)/H(+) activity. Mutation of K305 (putative transmembrane helix 10) to Ala resulted in a compromised phenotype characterized by an increase in apparent K(m) for Na(+) (36 vs. 7.6 mM for the wildtype) and Li(+) (17 vs. 0.22 mM), In summary, the Na(+)/H(+) antiport activity profile of the NapA type transporter of T. thermophilus resembles that of NhaA from E. coli, whereas in contrast to NhaA the T. thermophilus NapA antiporter is characterized by high Li(+)/H(+) antiport activity at acidic pH.  相似文献   

9.
Digestion with trypsin of purified His-tagged NhaA in a solution of dodecyl maltoside yields two fragments at alkaline pH but only one fragment at acidic pH. Determination of the amino acid sequence of the N terminus of the cleavage products show that the pH-sensitive cleavage site of NhaA, both in isolated everted membrane vesicles as well as in the pure protein in detergent, is Lys-249 in loop VIII-IX, which connects transmembrane segment VIII to IX. Interestingly, the two polypeptide products of the split antiporter remain complexed and co-purify on Ni(2+)-NTA column. Loop VIII-IX has also been found to play a role in the pH regulation of NhaA; three mutations introduced into the loop shift the pH profile of the Na(+)/H(+) antiporter activity as measured in everted membrane vesicles. An insertion mutation introducing Ile-Glu-Gly between residues Lys-249 and Arg-250 (K249-IEG-R250) and Cys replacement of either Val-254 (V254C) or Glu-241 (E241C) cause acidic shift of the pH profile of the antiporter by 0.5, 1, and 0.3 pH units, respectively. Interestingly, the double mutant E241C/V254C introduces a basic shift of more than 1 pH unit with respect to the single mutation V254C. Taken together these results imply the involvement of loop VIII-IX in the pH-induced conformational change, which leads to activation of NhaA at alkaline pH.  相似文献   

10.
We have previously shown that the activity of NhaA is regulated by pH and found mutations that affect dramatically the pH dependence of the rate but not the K(m) (for Na(+) and Li(+)) of NhaA. In the present work, we found that helix IV is involved both in ion translocation as well as in pH regulation of NhaA. Two novel types of NhaA mutants were found clustered in trans membrane segment (TMS) IV: One type (D133C, T132C, and P129L) affects the apparent K(m) of NhaA to the cations with no significant effect on the pH profile of the antiporter; no shift of the pH profile was found when the activity of these mutants was measured at saturating Na(+) concentration. In contrast, the other type of mutations (A127V and A127T) was found to affect both the K(m) and the pH dependence of the rate of NhaA whether tested at saturating Na(+) concentration or not. These results imply that residues involved in the ion translocation of NhaA may (A127) or may not (D133, T132, and P129) overlap with those affecting the pH response of the antiporter. All mutants cluster in the N-terminal half of the putative alpha-helix IV, one type on one face, the other on the opposite. Cys accessibility test demonstrated that although D133C is located in the middle of TMS IV, it is inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide and is exposed to the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

11.
Kozachkov L  Herz K  Padan E 《Biochemistry》2007,46(9):2419-2430
The 3D structure of Escherichia coli NhaA, determined at pH 4, provided the first structural insights into the mechanism of antiport and pH regulation of a Na+/H+ antiporter. However, because NhaA is activated at physiological pH (pH 7.0-8.5), many questions pertaining to the active state of NhaA have remained open, including the physiological role of helix X. Using a structural-based evolutionary approach in silico, we identified a segment of most conserved residues in the middle of helix X. These residues were then used as targets for functional studies at physiological pH. Cysteine-scanning mutagenesis showed that Gly303, in the middle of the conserved segment, is an essential residue and Cys replacement of Lys300 retains only Li+/H+ antiporter activity, with a 20-fold increase in the apparent KM for Li+. Cys replacements of Leu296 and Gly299 increase the apparent KM of the Na+/H+ antiporter for both Na+ and Li+. Accessibility test to N-ethylmaleimide and 2-sulfonatoethyl methanethiosulfonate showed that G299C, K300C, and G303C are accessible to the cytoplasm. Suppressor mutations and site-directed chemical cross-linking identified a functional and/or structural interaction between helix X (G295C) and helix IVp (A130C). While these results were in accordance with the acid-locked crystal structure, surprisingly, conflicting data were also obtained; E78C of helix II cross-links very efficiently with several Cys replacements of helix X, and E78K/K300E is a suppressor mutation of K300E. These results reveal that, at alkaline pH, the distance between the conserved center of helix X and E78 of helix II is drastically decreased, implying a pH-induced conformational change of one or both helices.  相似文献   

12.
In order to delineate regions which play a role in the regulation of Na(+)/H(+) antiporter NhaA activity by pH, we analyzed the antiporter activities of various chimeric mutants constructed from specific portions of NhaA from Escherichia coli and Helicobacter pylori (EC and HP NhaA). HP NhaA contains 10 residues at the amino-terminus, and 38 residues in a loop region between the eighth and ninth transmembrane spans (loop 8), which are absent in EC NhaA. Deletion from HP NhaA or insertion into EC NhaA of the sequences caused almost no change in pH-dependent antiport activities relative to in the case of the wild-type parent molecules. Chimeras consisting of various combinations of the amino-terminal (amino terminus to sixth or eighth transmembrane span) and carboxy-terminal (seventh or ninth transmembrane span to the carboxy-terminus) regions of EC and HP NhaA showed antiporter activity profiles intermediate between those of the parent molecules. These results show that the two HP-specific sequences are not directly involved in the mechanism of pH sensing by HP NhaA and that the pH sensitivity of NhaA activity is not determined by the amino- or carboxy-terminal regions of NhaA alone, but may be due to interaction between unconserved residues in the two domains. In addition, it was suggested that loop 8 functions primarily as a hinge in both NhaA molecules.  相似文献   

13.
The crystal structure of Escherichia coli NhaA determined at pH 4 has provided insights into the mechanism of activity of a pH-regulated Na+/H+ antiporter. However, because NhaA is active at physiological pH (pH 6.5-8.5), many questions related to the active state of NhaA have remained unanswered. Our Cys scanning of the highly conserved transmembrane VIII at physiological pH reveals that (1) the Cys replacement G230C significantly increases the apparent Km of the antiporter to both Na+ (10-fold) and Li+ (6-fold). (2) Variants G223C and G230C cause a drastic alkaline shift of the pH profile of NhaA by 1 pH unit. (3) Residues Gly223-Ala226 line a periplasmic funnel at physiological pH as they do at pH 4. Both were modified by membrane-impermeant negatively charged 2-sulfonatoethyl methanethiosulfonate and positively charged 2-(trimethyl ammonium)-ethylmethanethiosulfonate sulfhydryl reagents that could reach Cys replacements from the periplasm via water-filled funnels only, whereas other Cys replacements on helix VIII were not accessible/reactive to the reagents. (4) Remarkably, the modification of variant V224C by 2-sulfonatoethyl methanethiosulfonate or 2-(trimethyl ammonium)-ethylmethanethiosulfonate totally inhibited antiporter activity, while N-ethyl maleimide modification had a very small effect on NhaA activity. Hence, the size—rather than the chemical modification or the charge—of the larger reagents interferes with the passage of ions through the periplasmic funnel. Taken together, our results at physiological pH reveal that amino acid residues in transmembrane VIII contribute to the cation passage of NhaA and its pH regulation.  相似文献   

14.
The pH dependence of the structure of the main Na(+)/H(+) antiporter NhaA of Escherichia coli is studied by continuous-wave (CW) and pulse electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) techniques on singly spin-labeled mutants. Residues 225 and 254 were selected for site-directed spin labeling, as previous work suggested that they are situated in domains undergoing pH-dependent structural changes. A well-defined distance of 4.4 nm between residues H225R1 in neighboring molecules is detected by a modulation in double electron-electron resonance data. This indicates that NhaA exists as a dimer, as previously suggested by a low-resolution electron density map and cross-linking experiments. The modulation depth decreases reversibly when pH is decreased from 8 to 5.8. A quantitative analysis suggests a dimerization equilibrium, which depends moderately on pH. Furthermore, the mobility and polarity of the environment of a spin label attached to residue 225 change only slightly with changing pH, while no other changes are detected by CW EPR. As antiporter activity of NhaA changes drastically in the studied pH range, residues 225 and 254 are probably located not in the sensor or ion translocation sites themselves but in domains that convey the signal from the pH sensor to the translocation site.  相似文献   

15.
The crystal structure of NhaA Na(+)/H(+) antiporter of Escherichia coli has provided a basis to explore the mechanism of Na(+) and H(+) exchange and its regulation by pH. However, the dynamics and nature of the pH-induced changes in the proteins remained unknown. Using molecular mechanics methods, we studied the dynamic behavior of the hydrogen-bonded network in NhaA on shifting the pH from 4 to 8. The helical regions preserved the general architecture of NhaA throughout the pH change. In contrast, large conformational drifts occurred at pH 8 in the loop regions, and an increased flexibility of helix IVp was observed on the pH shift. A remarkable pH-induced conformational reorganization was found: at acidic pH helix X is slightly curved, whereas at alkaline pH, it is kinked around residue Lys(300). The barrier that exists between the cytoplasmic and periplasmic funnels at low pH is removed, and the two funnels are bridged by hydrogen bonds between water molecules and residues located in the TMSs IV/XI assembly and helix X at alkaline pH. In the variant Gly(338)Ser that lost pH control, a hydrogen-bonded chain between Ser(338) and Lys(300) was found to block the pH-induced conformational reorganization of helix X.  相似文献   

16.
Environmental DNA libraries prepared from three different soils were screened for genes conferring Na(+)(Li(+))/H(+) antiporter activity on the antiporter-deficient Escherichia coli strain KNabc. The presence of those genes was verified on selective LK agar containing 7.5 mM LiCl. Two positive E. coli clones were obtained during the initial screening of 1,480,000 recombinant E. coli strains. Both clones harbored a plasmid (pAM1 and pAM3) that conferred a stable Li(+)-resistant phenotype. The insert of pAM2 (1,886 bp) derived from pAM1 contained a gene (1,185 bp) which encodes a novel Na(+)/H(+) antiporter belonging to the NhaA family. The insert of pAM3 harbored the DNA region of E. coli K-12 containing nhaA, nhaR, and gef. This region is flanked by highly conserved insertion elements. The sequence identity with E. coli decreased significantly outside of the insertion sequence elements, indicating that the unknown organism from which the insert of pAM3 was cloned is different from E. coli. The products of the antiporter genes located on pAM2 and pAM3 revealed functional homology to NhaA of E. coli and enabled the antiporter-deficient E. coli mutant to grow on solid media in the presence of up to 450 mM NaCl or 250 mM LiCl at pH 8.0. The Na(+)/H(+) antiporter activity in everted membrane vesicles that were derived from the E. coli strains KNabc/pAM2 and KNabc/pAM3 showed a substantial increase between pHs 7 and 8.5. The maximal activity was observed at pHs 8.3 and 8.6, respectively. The K(m) values of both antiporters for Na(+) were approximately 10-fold higher than the values for Li(+).  相似文献   

17.
We examined the structure-function relationships of residues in the fifth transmembrane domain (TM5) of the Na+/H+ antiporter A (NhaA) from Helicobacter pylori (HP NhaA) by cysteine scanning mutagenesis. TM5 contains two aspartate residues, Asp-171 and Asp-172, which are essential for antiporter activity. Thirty-five residues spanning the putative TM5 and adjacent loop regions were replaced by cysteines. Cysteines replacing Val-162, Ile-165, and Asp-172 were labeled with NEM, suggesting that these three residues are exposed to a hydrophilic cavity within the membrane. Other residues in the putative TM domain, including Asp-171, were not labeled. Inhibition of NEM labeling by the membrane impermeable reagent AMS suggests that Val-162 and Ile-165 are exposed to a water filled channel open to the cytoplasmic space, whereas Asp-172 is exposed to the periplasmic space. D171C and D172C mutants completely lost Na+/H+ and Li+/H+ antiporter activities, whereas other Cys replacements did not result in a significant loss of these activities. These results suggest that Asp-171 and Asp-172 and the surrounding residues of TM5 provide an essential structure for H+ binding and Na+ or Li+ exchange. A168C and Y183C showed markedly decreased antiporter activities at acidic pH, whereas their activities were higher at alkaline pH, suggesting that the conformation of TM5 also plays a crucial role in the HP NhaA-specific acidic pH antiporter activity.  相似文献   

18.
Rimon A  Tzubery T  Galili L  Padan E 《Biochemistry》2002,41(50):14897-14905
The unique trypsin cleavable site of NhaA, the Na(+)/H(+) antiporter of Escherichia coli, was exploited to detect a change in mobility of cross-linked products of NhaA by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Double-Cys replacements were introduced into loops, one on each side of the trypsin cleavage site (Lys 249). The proximity of paired Cys residues was assessed by disulfide cross-linking of the two tryptic fragments, using three homobifunctional cross-linking agents: 1,6-bis(maleimido)hexane (BMH), N,N'-o-phenylenedimaleimide (o-PDM), and N,N'-p-phenylenedimaleimide (p-PDM). The interloop cross-linking was found to be very specific, indicating that the loops are not merely random coils that interact randomly. In the periplasmic side of NhaA, two patterns of cross-linking are observed: (a) all three cross-linking reagents cross-link very efficiently between the double-Cys replacements A118C/S286C, N177C/S352C, and H225C/S352C; (b) only BMH cross-links the double-Cys replacements A118C/S352C, N177C/S286C, and H225C/S286C. In the cytoplasmic side of NhaA, three patterns of cross-linking are observed: (a) all three cross-linking reagents cross-link very efficiently the pairs of Cys replacements L4C/E252C, S146C/L316C, S146C/R383C, and E241C/E252C; (b) BMH and p-PDM cross-link efficiently the pairs of Cys replacements S87C/E252C, S87C/L316C, and S146C/E252C; (c) none of the reagents cross-links the double-Cys replacements L4C/L316C, L4C/R383C, S87C/R383C, A202C/E252C, A202C/L316C, A202C/R383C, E241C/L316C, and E241C/R383C. The data reveal that the N-terminus and loop VIII-IX that have previously been shown to change conformation with pH are in close proximity within the NhaA protein. The data also suggest close proximity between N-terminal and C-terminal helices at both the cytoplasmic and the periplasmic face of NhaA.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Na(+)-H(+) antiporters are integral membrane proteins that exchange Na(+) for H(+) across the cytoplasmic membrane and many intracellular membranes. They are essential for Na(+), pH, and volume homeostasis, which are processes crucial for cell viability. Accordingly, antiporters are important drug targets in humans and underlie salt resistance in plants. Many Na(+)-H(+) antiporters are tightly regulated by pH. Escherichia coli NhaA, a prototype pH-regulated antiporter, exchanges 2H(+) for 1Na(+) (or Li(+)). The NhaA crystal structure has provided insight into the pH-regulated mechanism of antiporter action and revealed transmembrane segments, which are interrupted by extended mid-membrane chains that have since been found with variations in other ion-transport proteins. This novel structural fold creates a delicately balanced electrostatic environment in the middle of the membrane, which might be essential for ion binding and translocation.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号