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1.
Ammonium transport proteins of the Mep/Amt/Rh family include microbial and plant Mep/Amt members, crucial for ammonium scavenging, and animal Rhesus factors likely involved in ammonium disposal. Recent structural information on two bacterial Mep/Amt proteins has revealed the presence, in the hydrophobic conducting pore, of a pair of preserved histidines proposed to play an important role in substrate conductance, by participating either in NH(4)(+) deprotonation or in shaping the pore. Here we highlight the existence of two functional Mep/Amt subfamilies distinguishable according to whether the first of these histidines is conserved, as in yeast ScMep2, or replaced by glutamate, as in ScMep1. Replacement of the native histidine of ScMep2 with glutamate leads to conversion from ScMep2 to ScMep1-like properties. This includes a two-unit upshift of the optimal pH for transport and an increase of the transport rate, consistent with alleviation of an energy-limiting step. Similar effects are observed when the same substitution is introduced into the Escherichia coli AmtB protein. In contrast to ScMep1, ScMep2 is proposed to play an additional signaling role in the induction of filamentous growth, a dimorphic change often associated with virulence in pathogenic fungi. We show here that the histidine to glutamate substitution in ScMep2 leads to uncoupling of the transport and sensor functions, suggesting that a ScMep2-specific transport mechanism might be responsible for filamentation. Our overall data suggest the existence of two functional groups of Mep/Amt-type proteins with different transport mechanisms and distinct impacts on cell physiology and signaling.  相似文献   

2.
External hyphae, which play a key role in nitrogen nutrition of trees, are considered as the absorbing structures of the ectomycorrhizal symbiosis. Here, we have cloned and characterized Hebeloma cylindrosporum AMT1, GLNA and GDHA genes, which encode a third ammonium transporter, a glutamine synthetase and an NADP-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase respectively. Amt1 can fully restore the pseudohyphal growth defect of a Saccharomyces cerevisiae mep2 mutant, and this is the first evidence that a heterologous member of the Mep/Amt family complements this dimorphic change defect. Dixon plots of the inhibition of methylamine uptake by ammonium indicate that Amt1 has a much higher affinity than the two previously characterized members (Amt2 and Amt3) of the Amt/Mep family in H. cylindrosporum. We also identified the intracellular nitrogen pool(s) responsible for the modulation of expression of AMT1, AMT2, AMT3, GDHA and GLNA. In response to exogenously supplied ammonium or glutamine, AMT1, AMT2 and GDHA were downregulated and, therefore, these genes are subjected to nitrogen repression in H. cylindrosporum. Exogenously supplied nitrate failed to induce a downregulation of the five mRNAs after transfer of mycelia from a N-starved condition. Our results demonstrate that glutamine is the main effector for AMT1 and AMT2 repression, whereas GDHA repression is controlled by intracellular ammonium, independently of the intracellular glutamine or glutamate concentration. Ammonium transport activity may be controlled by intracellular NH4+. AMT3 and GLNA are highly expressed but not highly regulated. A model for ammonium assimilation in H. cylindrosporum is presented.  相似文献   

3.
Membrane topology of the Mep/Amt family of ammonium transporters   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
The Mep/Amt proteins constitute a new family of transport proteins that are ubiquitous in nature. Members from bacteria, yeast and plants have been identified experimentally as high-affinity ammonium transporters. We have determined the topology of AmtB, a Mep/Amt protein from Escherichia coli, as a representative protein for the complete family. This was established using a minimal set of AmtB-PhoA fusion proteins with a complementary set of AmtB-LacZ fusions. These data, accompanied by an in silico analysis, indicate that the majority of the Mep/Amt proteins contain 11 membrane-spanning helices, with the N-terminus on the exterior face of the membrane and the C-terminus on the interior. A small subset, including E. coli AmtB, probably have an additional twelfth membrane-spanning region at the N-terminus. Addition of PhoA or LacZ alpha-peptide to the C-terminus of E. coli AmtB resulted in complete loss of transport activity, as judged by measurements of [14C]-methylammonium uptake. This C-terminal region, along with four membrane-spanning helices, contains multiple residues that are conserved within the Mep/Amt protein family. Structural modelling of the E. coli AmtB protein suggests a number of secondary structural features that might contribute to function, including a putative ammonium binding site on the periplasmic face of the membrane at residue Asp-182. The implications of these results are discussed in relation to the structure and function of the related human Rhesus proteins.  相似文献   

4.
Three ammonium transport systems of the Mep/Amt/Rh superfamily contribute to ammonium uptake for use as a nitrogen source in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. A specific sensor role has further been proposed for Mep2 in the stimulation of pseudohyphal development during ammonium limitation. Optimal ammonium transport by the Mep proteins requires the Npr1 kinase, a potential target of the target-of-rapamycin signalling pathway. We show here that the growth impairment of cells lacking Npr1 on many nitrogen sources is shared by cells deprived of the three Mep proteins and is a consequence of deficient ammonium retrieval. Expression of a newly isolated Npr1-independent and hyperactive Mep2 in cells lacking Npr1 and/or the Mep proteins restores growth on low ammonium but also on other nitrogen sources. This hyperactive Mep2 variant efficiently counteracts ammonium excretion. Hence, ammonium uptake activity plays an important role in compensating for leakage of catabolic ammonium. Our data also reveal that the requirement of Npr1 for ammonium-induced pseudohyphal growth is an indirect consequence of its necessity for Mep2-mediated ammonium transport. Finally, we show that Mep2 participates, through ammonium leakage compensation, in pseudohyphal growth induced by amino acid starvation. This argues further in favour of tight coupling of Mep2 transport and sensor functions.  相似文献   

5.
Heterologous expression of the yeast triple Mep mutant has enabled the first molecular characterization of AMT/MEP family members in an ectomycorrhizal fungus. External hyphae, which play a key role in nitrogen nutrition of trees, are considered as the absorbing structure of the ectomycorrhizal symbiosis and therefore molecular studies on ammonium transport in hyphae are urgently needed. The kinetic properties of AMT2 and AMT3 from Hebeloma cylindrosporum were studied in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Expression of HcAmts in the yeast triple Mep mutant restored ammonium retention within cells. The HcAmts did not complement the ammonium sensing defect phenotype of Mep2Delta cells during pseudohyphal differentiation. Northern blot analysis in H. cylindrosporum showed that the HcAMTs were up-regulated upon nitrogen deprivation and down-regulated by ammonium.  相似文献   

6.
The ammonium transport family Amt/Rh comprises ubiquitous integral membrane proteins that facilitate ammonium movement across biological membranes. Besides their role in transport, Amt proteins also play a role in sensing the levels of ammonium in the environment, a process that depends on complex formation with cytosolic proteins of the P(II) family. Trimeric P(II) proteins from a variety of organisms undergo a cycle of reversible posttranslational modification according to the prevailing nitrogen supply. In proteobacteria, P(II) proteins are subjected to reversible uridylylation of each monomer. In this study we used the purified proteins from Azospirillum brasilense to analyze the effect of P(II) uridylylation on the protein's ability to engage complex formation with AmtB in vitro. Our results show that partially uridylylated P(II) trimers can interact with AmtB in vitro, the implication of this finding in the regulation of nitrogen metabolism is discussed. We also report an improved expression and purification protocol for the A. brasilense AmtB protein that might be applicable to AmtB proteins from other organisms.  相似文献   

7.
Ammonium movement across biological membranes is facilitated by a class of ubiquitous channel proteins from the Amt/Rh family. Amt proteins have also been implicated in cellular responses to ammonium availability in many organisms. Ammonium sensing by Amt in bacteria is mediated by complex formation with cytosolic proteins of the P(II) family. In this study we have characterized in vitro complex formation between the AmtB and P(II) proteins (GlnB and GlnZ) from the diazotrophic plant-associative bacterium Azospirillum brasilense. AmtB-P(II) complex formation only occurred in the presence of adenine nucleotides and was sensitive to 2-oxoglutarate when Mg(2+) and ATP were present, but not when ATP was substituted by ADP. We have also shown in vitro complex formation between GlnZ and the nitrogenase regulatory enzyme DraG, which was stimulated by ADP. The stoichiometry of this complex was 1:1 (DraG monomer : GlnZ trimer). We have previously reported that in vivo high levels of extracellular ammonium cause DraG to be sequestered to the cell membrane in an AmtB and GlnZ-dependent manner. We now report the reconstitution of a ternary complex involving AmtB, GlnZ and DraG in vitro. Sequestration of a regulatory protein by the membrane-bound AmtB-P(II) complex defines a new regulatory role for Amt proteins in Prokaryotes.  相似文献   

8.
Amt/Rh proteins, which mediate movement of ammonium across cell membranes, are spread throughout the three kingdoms of life. Most functional studies on various members of the family have been performed using cellular assays in heterologous expression systems, which are, however, not very well suited for detailed mechanistic studies. Although now generally considered to be ammonia conducting channels, based on a number of experimental studies and structural insights, the possibility remains that some plant Amts facilitate net ammonium ion transport. The Escherichia coli channel AmtB has become the model system of choice for analysis of the mechanism of ammonia conductance, increasingly also through molecular dynamics simulations. Further progress in a more detailed mechanistic understanding of these proteins requires a reliable in vitro assay using purified protein, allowing quantitative kinetic measurements under a variety of experimental conditions for different Amt/Rh proteins, including mutants. Here, we critically review the existing functional data in the context of the most interesting and unresolved mechanistic questions and we present our results, obtained using an in vitro assay set up with the purified E. coli channel AmtB.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Amt/Rh proteins, which mediate movement of ammonium across cell membranes, are spread throughout the three kingdoms of life. Most functional studies on various members of the family have been performed using cellular assays in heterologous expression systems, which are, however, not very well suited for detailed mechanistic studies. Although now generally considered to be ammonia conducting channels, based on a number of experimental studies and structural insights, the possibility remains that some plant Amts facilitate net ammonium ion transport. The Escherichia coli channel AmtB has become the model system of choice for analysis of the mechanism of ammonia conductance, increasingly also through molecular dynamics simulations. Further progress in a more detailed mechanistic understanding of these proteins requires a reliable in vitro assay using purified protein, allowing quantitative kinetic measurements under a variety of experimental conditions for different Amt/Rh proteins, including mutants. Here, we critically review the existing functional data in the context of the most interesting and unresolved mechanistic questions and we present our results, obtained using an in vitro assay set up with the purified E. coli channel AmtB.  相似文献   

11.
The Amt/Mep/Rh family of ammonium transport proteins   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The Amt/Mep/Rh family of integral membrane proteins comprises ammonium transporters of bacteria, archaea and eukarya, as well as the Rhesus proteins found in animals. They play a central role in the uptake of reduced nitrogen for biosynthetic purposes, in energy metabolism, or in renal excretion. Recent structural information on two prokaryotic Amt proteins has significantly contributed to our understanding of this class, but basic questions concerning the transport mechanism and the nature of the transported substrate, NH3 or [NH4(+)], remain to be answered. Here we review functional and structural studies on Amt proteins and discuss the bioenergetic issues raised by the various mechanistic proposals present in the literature.  相似文献   

12.
The Rhesus (Rh) blood group system is expressed by a pair of 12-transmembrane-domain-containing proteins, the RhCcEe and RhD proteins. RhCcEe and RhD associate as a Rh core complex that comprises one RhD/CcEe protein and most likely two Rh-associated glycoproteins (RhAG) as a trimer. All these Rh proteins are homologous and share this homology with two human non-erythroid proteins, RhBG and RhCG. All Rh protein superfamily members share homology and function in a similar manner to the Mep/Amt ammonium transporters, which are highly conserved in bacteria, plants and invertebrates. Significant advances have been made in our understanding of the structure and function of Rh proteins, as well as in the clinical management of Rh haemolytic disease. This review summarises our current knowledge concerning the molecular biology of Rh proteins and their role in transfusion and pregnancy incompatibility.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Escherichia coli AmtB is an archetypal member of the ammonium transporter (Amt) family, a family of proteins that are conserved in all domains of life. Reconstitution of AmtB in the presence of lipids produced large, ordered two-dimensional crystals. From these, a 12 A resolution projection map was determined by cryoelectron microscopy, and high-resolution topographs were acquired using atomic force microscopy. Both techniques showed the trimeric structure of AmtB in which each monomer seems to have a pseudo-two-fold symmetry. This arrangement is likely to represent the in vivo structure. This work provides the first views of the structure of any member of the Amt family.  相似文献   

15.
The ammonium permease Mep2 induces a switch from unicellular yeast to filamentous growth in response to nitrogen limitation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Candida albicans. In S. cerevisiae, the function of Mep2 and other ammonium permeases depends on the protein kinase Npr1. Mutants lacking NPR1 cannot grow on low concentrations of ammonium and do not filament under limiting nitrogen conditions. A G349C mutation in Mep2 renders the protein independent of Npr1 and results in increased ammonium transport and hyperfilamentous growth, suggesting that the signaling activity of Mep2 directly correlates with its ammonium transport activity. In this study, we investigated the role of Npr1 in ammonium transport and Mep2-mediated filamentation in C. albicans. We found that the two ammonium permeases Mep1 and Mep2 of C. albicans differ in their dependency on Npr1. While Mep1 could function well in the absence of the Npr1 kinase, ammonium transport by Mep2 was virtually abolished in npr1Δ mutants. However, the dependence of Mep2 activity on Npr1 was relieved at higher temperatures (37°C), and Mep2 could efficiently induce filamentous growth under limiting nitrogen conditions in npr1Δ mutants. Like in S. cerevisiae, mutation of the conserved glycine at position 343 in Mep2 of C. albicans to cysteine resulted in Npr1-independent ammonium uptake. In striking contrast, however, the mutation abolished the ability of Mep2 to induce filamentous growth both in the wild type and in npr1Δ mutants. Therefore, a mutation that improves ammonium transport by Mep2 under nonpermissible conditions eliminates its signaling activity in C. albicans.  相似文献   

16.
The ammonium transport (Amt) proteins are a highly conserved family of integral membrane proteins found in eubacteria, archaea, fungi and plants. Genetic, biochemical and bioinformatic analyses suggest that they have a common tertiary structure comprising eleven trans-membrane helices with an N-out, C-in topology. The cytoplasmic C-terminus is variable in length but includes a core region of some 22 residues with considerable sequence conservation. Previous studies have indicated that this C-terminus is not absolutely required for Amt activity but that mutations that alter C-terminal residues can have very marked effects. Using the Escherichia coli AmtB protein as a model system for Amt proteins, we have carried out an extensive site-directed mutagenesis study to investigate the possible role of this region of the protein. Our data indicate that nearly all mutations fall into two phenotypic classes that are best explained in terms of two distinct effects of the C-terminal region on AmtB activity. Residues within the C-terminus play a significant role in normal AmtB function and the C-terminal region might also mediate co-operativity between the three subunits of AmtB.  相似文献   

17.
18.
The Amt proteins are high affinity ammonium transporters that are conserved in all domains of life. In bacteria and archaea the Amt structural genes (amtB) are invariably linked to glnK, which encodes a member of the P(II) signal transduction protein family, proteins that regulate many facets of nitrogen metabolism. We have now shown that Escherichia coli AmtB is inactivated by formation of a membrane-bound complex with GlnK. Complex formation is reversible and occurs within seconds in response to micromolar changes in the extracellular ammonium concentration. Regulation is mediated by the uridylylation/deuridylylation of GlnK in direct response to fluctuations in the intracellular glutamine pool. Furthermore under physiological conditions AmtB activity is required for GlnK deuridylylation. Hence the transporter is an integral part of the signal transduction cascade, and AmtB can be formally considered to act as an ammonium sensor. This system provides an exquisitely sensitive mechanism to control ammonium flux into the cell, and the conservation of glnK linkage to amtB suggests that this regulatory mechanism may occur throughout prokaryotes.  相似文献   

19.
Molecular mechanisms of ammonium transport and accumulation in plants   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Ludewig U  Neuhäuser B  Dynowski M 《FEBS letters》2007,581(12):2301-2308
The integral membrane proteins of the ammonium transporter (AMT/Rh) family provide the major route for shuttling ammonium (NH(4)(+)/NH(3)) across bacterial, archaeal, fungal and plant membranes. These proteins are distantly related to the Rh (rhesus) glycoproteins, which are absent in higher plants, but are present in many species, including bacteria and mammals. It appears that the large nitrogen requirement of plants resulted in unique strategies to acquire, capture and/or release ammonium. The biological function of plant ammonium transporters will be discussed and compared to other AMT/Rh proteins.  相似文献   

20.
Members of the Amt/Rh family of transporters are found almost ubiquitously in all forms of life. However, the molecular state of the substrate (NH3 or NH4+) has been the subject of active debate. At least for bacterial Amt proteins, the model emerging from computational, X-ray crystal and mutational analysis is that NH4+ is deprotonated at the exterior, conducted through the membrane as NH3, and reprotonated at the cytoplasmic interface. A proton concomitantly is transferred from the exterior to the interior, although the mechanism is unclear. Here we discuss recent evidence indicating that an important function of at least some eukaryotic and bacterial Amts is to act as ammonium sensors and regulate cellular metabolism in response to changes in external ammonium concentrations. This is now well documented in the regulation of yeast pseudohyphal development and filamentous growth. As well, membrane sequestration of GlnK, a PII signal transduction protein, by AmtB has been shown to regulate nitrogenase in some diazotrophs, and nitrogen metabolism in some Gram-positive bacteria. Formation of GlnK–AmtB membrane complexes might have other, as yet undiscovered, regulatory roles. This possibility is emphasized by the discovery in some genomes of genes for chimeric Amts with fusions to various regulatory elements.  相似文献   

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