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1.
The outer membrane subunit OprM of the multicomponent efflux pump of Pseudomonas aeruginosa has been assumed to form a transmembrane xenobiotic exit channel across the outer membrane. We challenged this hypothesis to clarify the underlying ambiguity by manipulating the amino-terminal signal sequence of the OprM protein of the MexAB-OprM efflux pump in P. aeruginosa. [(3)H]Palmitate uptake experiments revealed that OprM is a lipoprotein. The following lines of evidence unequivocally established that the OprM protein functioned at the periplasmic space. (i) The OprM protein, in which a signal sequence including Cys-18 was replaced with that of periplasmic azurin, appeared in the periplasmic space but not in the outer membrane fraction, and the protein fully functioned as the pump subunit. (ii) The hybrid OprM containing the N-terminal transmembrane segment of the inner membrane protein, MexF, appeared exclusively in the inner membrane fraction. The hybrid protein containing 186 or 331 amino acid residues of MexF was fully active for the antibiotic extrusion, but a 42-residue protein was totally inactive. (iii) The mutant OprM, in which the N-terminal cysteine residue was replaced with another amino acid, appeared unmodified with fatty acid and was fractionated in both the periplasmic space and the inner membrane fraction but not in the outer membrane fraction. The Cys-18-modified OprM functioned for the antibiotic extrusion indistinguishably from that in the wild-type strain. We concluded, based on these results, that the OprM protein was anchored in the outer membrane via fatty acid(s) attached to the N-terminal cysteine residue and that the entire polypeptide moiety was exposed to the periplasmic space.  相似文献   

2.
Gram-negative bacteria are capable of expelling diverse xenobiotic substances from within the cell by use of three-component efflux pumps in which the energy-activated inner membrane transporter is connected to the outer membrane channel protein via the membrane fusion protein. In this work, we describe the crystal structure of the membrane fusion protein MexA from the Pseudomonas aeruginosa MexAB-OprM pump in the hexameric ring arrangement. Electron microscopy study on the chimeric complex of MexA and the outer membrane protein OprM reveals that MexA makes a tip-to-tip interaction with OprM, which suggests a docking model for MexA and OprM. This docking model agrees well with genetic results and depicts detailed interactions. Opening of the OprM channel is accompanied by the simultaneous exposure of a protein structure resembling a six-bladed cogwheel, which intermeshes with the complementary cogwheel structure in the MexA hexamer. Taken together, we suggest an assembly and channel opening model for the MexAB-OprM pump. This study provides a better understanding of multidrug resistance in Gram-negative bacteria.  相似文献   

3.
This paper describes the overproduction and purification of the C-terminus polyhistidine-tagged outer membrane protein OprM, which is a part of the MexA-MexB-OprM active efflux system of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Renaturation of the protein from inclusion bodies of Escherichia coli was achieved using guanidine-HCl as denaturing agent and n-octylpolyoxyethylene (C8POE) and n-octyltetraoxyethylene (C8E4) as nonionic detergents. The refolded protein was purified by ion-exchange and nickel-affinity chromatography. The final yield was 6 mg of pure histidine-tagged OprM per liter of E. coli culture. Renaturation was monitored by the effects of heating prior to SDS-PAGE, using a typical and exclusive property of outer membrane proteins. Immunoblotting revealed that the recombinant protein is addressed to the outer membrane of E. coli, after maturation by excision of its N-terminal signal sequence. Complementation of an oprM deletion mutant with the plasmid encoded histidine-tagged OprM protein restored antibiotic susceptibilities to wild-type levels, demonstrating functionality of recombinant OprM.  相似文献   

4.
OprM, the outer membrane component of the MexAB-OprM multidrug efflux pump of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, has been assumed to facilitate the export of antibiotics across the outer membrane of this organism. Here we purified to homogeneity the OprM protein, reconstituted it into liposome membranes, and tested its channel activity by using the liposome swelling assay. It was demonstrated that OprM is a channel-forming protein and exhibits the channel property that amino acids diffuse more efficiently than saccharides. However, antibiotics showed no significant diffusion through the OprM channel in the liposome membrane, suggesting that OprM functions as a gated channel. We reasoned that the protease treatment may cause the disturbance of the gate structure of OprM. Hence, we treated OprM reconstituted in the membranes with alpha-chymotrypsin and examined its solute permeability. The results demonstrated that the protease treatment caused the opening of an OprM channel through which antibiotics were able to diffuse. To elucidate which cleavage is intimately related to the opening, we constructed mutant OprM proteins where the amino acid at the cleavage site was replaced with another amino acid. By examining the channel activity of these mutant proteins, it was shown that the proteolysis at tyrosine 185 and tyrosine 196 of OprM caused the channel opening. Furthermore, these residues were shown to face into the periplasmic space and interact with other component(s). We considered the possible opening mechanism of the OprM channel based on the structure of TolC, a homologue of OprM.  相似文献   

5.
OprM is the outer membrane component of the MexA-MexB-OprM efflux system of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Multiple-sequence alignment of this protein and its homologues identified several regions of high sequence conservation that were targeted for site-directed mutagenesis. Of several deletions which were stably expressed, two, spanning residues G199 to A209 and A278 to N286 of the mature protein, were unable to restore antibiotic resistance in OprM-deficient strains of P. aeruginosa. Still, mutation of several conserved residues within these regions did not adversely affect OprM function. Mutation of the highly conserved N-terminal cysteine residue, site of acylation of this presumed lipoprotein, also did not affect expression or activity of OprM. Similarly, substitution of the OprM lipoprotein signal, including consensus lipoprotein box, with the signal peptide of OprF, the major porin of this organism, failed to impact on expression or activity. Apparently, acylation is not essential for OprM function. A large deletion at the N terminus, from A12 to R98, compromised OprM expression to some extent, although the deletion derivative did retain some activity. Several deletions failed to yield an OprM protein, including one lacking an absolutely conserved LGGGW sequence near the C terminus of the protein. The pattern of permissive and nonpermissive deletions was used to test a topology model for OprM based on the recently published crystal structure of the OprM homologue, TolC (V. Koronakis, A. Sharff, E. Koronakis, B. Luisi, and C. Hughes, Nature 405:914-919, 2000). The data are consistent with OprM monomer existing as a substantially periplasmic protein with four outer membrane-spanning regions.  相似文献   

6.
R Srikumar  X Z Li    K Poole 《Journal of bacteriology》1997,179(24):7875-7881
A major feature of the MexAB-OprM multidrug efflux pump which distinguishes it from the MexCD-OprJ and MexEF-OprN multidrug efflux systems in Pseudomonas aeruginosa is its ability to export a wide variety of beta-lactam antibiotics. Given the periplasmic location of their targets it is feasible that beta-lactams exit the cell via the outer membrane OprM without interaction with MexA and MexB, though the latter appear to be necessary for OprM function. To test this, chimeric MexAB-OprJ and MexCD-OprM efflux pumps were reconstituted in delta mexCD delta oprM and delta mexAB delta oprJ strains, respectively, and the influence of the exchange of outer membrane components on substrate (i.e., beta-lactam) specificity was assessed. Both chimeric pumps were active in antibiotic efflux, as evidenced by their contributions to resistance to a variety of antimicrobial agents, although there was no change in resistance profiles relative to the native pumps, indicating that OprM is not the determining factor for the beta-lactam specificity of MexAB-OprM. Thus, one or both of inner membrane-associated proteins MexA and MexB are responsible for drug recognition, including recognition of beta-lactams.  相似文献   

7.
Early in vivo experiments revealed that the MexA-MexB dipartite pump unit of Pseudomonas aeruginosa conferred drug resistance to the cells, which expressed OprM, but not to the OprN-bearing cells. While the MexE-MexF unit interplayed with either the outer membrane subunits. Taking advantage of this subunit selectivity, we selected the MexA mutant that gained the ability to interplay with OprN. Four mutants have been isolated and all showed an amino acid substitution (Q116R) in the coiled-coil domain of MexA. The hybrid protein bearing the coiled-coil domain of MexA and the remainder domains from MexE retained the ability to interplay with OprM, but lost the functional interplay with OprN. These results established that the coiled-coil domain of the membrane fusion protein is responsible for selecting the compatible outer membrane subunit.  相似文献   

8.
The OprM lipoprotein of Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a member of the MexAB-OprM xenobiotic-antibiotic transporter subunits that is assumed to serve as the drug discharge duct across the outer membrane. The channel structure must differ from that of the porin-type open pore because the protein facilitates the exit of antibiotics but not the entry. For better understanding of the structure-function linkage of this important pump subunit, we studied the x-ray crystallographic structure of OprM at the 2.56-angstroms resolution. The overall structure exhibited trimeric assembly of the OprM monomer that consisted mainly of two domains: the membrane-anchoring beta-barrel and the cavity-forming alpha-barrel. OprM anchors the outer membrane by two modes of membrane insertions. One is via the covalently attached NH(2)-terminal fatty acids and the other is the beta-barrel structure consensus on the outer membrane-spanning proteins. The beta-barrel had a pore opening with a diameter of about 6-8 angstroms, which is not large enough to accommodate the exit of any antibiotics. The periplasmic alpha-barrel was about 100 angstroms long formed mainly by a bundle of alpha-helices that formed a solvent-filled cavity of about 25,000 angstroms(3). The proximal end of the cavity was tightly sealed, thereby not permitting the entry of any molecule. The result of this structure was that the resting state of OprM had a small outer membrane pore and a tightly closed periplasmic end, which sounds plausible because the protein should not allow free access of antibiotics. However, these observations raised another unsolved problem about the mechanism of opening of the OprM cavity ends. The crystal structure offers possible mechanisms of pore opening and pump assembly.  相似文献   

9.
The tripartite xenobiotic-antibiotic transporter of Pseudomonas aeruginosa consists of the inner membrane transporter (e.g., MexB, MexY), the periplasmic membrane-fusion-protein (e.g., MexA, MexX), and the outer membrane channel protein (e.g., OprM). These subunits were assumed to assemble into a transporter unit during export of the substrates. However, subunit interaction and their specificity in native form remained to be elucidated. To address these important questions, we analyzed the role of the individual subunits for the assembly of MexAB-OprM by pull-down assay tagging only one of the subunits. We found stable MexA-MexB-OprM complex without chemical cross-linking that withstand all purification procedures. Results of bi-partite interactions analysis showed tight association between MexA and OprM in the absence of MexB, whereas the expression systems lacking MexA failed to co-purify MexB or OprM. None of the heterologous subunit combinations such as MexA+MexY(his)+OprM and MexX+MexB(his)+OprM showed interaction. These results implied that the membrane fusion protein is central to the tripartite xenobiotic transporter assembly.  相似文献   

10.
Escherichia coli lipoproteins with Asp at position 2 remain in the inner membrane, whereas those having other amino acids are targeted to the outer membrane by the Lol system. However, inner membrane lipoproteins without Asp at position 2 are found in other Gram-negative bacteria. MexA of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, an inner membrane-specific lipoprotein involved in multidrug efflux, has Gly at position 2. To identify the residue or region of MexA that functions as an inner membrane retention signal, we constructed chimeric lipoproteins comprising various regions of MexA and an outer membrane lipoprotein, OprM, and analyzed their membrane localization. Lys and Ser at positions 3 and 4, respectively, were found to be critical for the inner membrane localization of MexA in P. aeruginosa. Substitution of these residues with Leu and Ile, which are present in OprM, was sufficient to target the chimeric lipoprotein to the outer membrane and to abolish the ability of MexA to confer drug resistance. The membrane specificity of a model lipoprotein, lipoMalE, a lipidated variant of the periplasmic maltose-binding protein of E. coli, was also determined by the residues at positions 3 and 4 in P. aeruginosa. In contrast to the widely accepted "+2 rule" for E. coli lipoproteins, these results suggest a new "+3, +4 rule" for lipoprotein sorting in P. aeruginosa, namely, the final destination of lipoproteins is determined by the residues at positions 3 and 4.  相似文献   

11.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa OprM is a protein involved in multiple-antibiotic resistance as the outer membrane component for the MexA-MexB-OprM efflux system. Planar lipid bilayer experiments showed that OprM had channel-forming activity with an average single-channel conductance of only about 80 pS in 1 M KCl. The gene encoding OprM was subjected to insertion mutagenesis by cloning of a foreign epitope from the circumsporozoite form of the malarial parasite Plasmodium falciparum into 11 sites. In Escherichia coli, 8 of the 11 insertion mutant genes expressed proteins at levels comparable to those obtained with the wild-type gene and the inserted malarial epitopes were surface accessible as assessed by indirect immunofluorescence. When moved to a P. aeruginosa OprM-deficient strain, seven of the insertion mutant genes expressed proteins at variable levels comparable to that of wild-type OprM and three of these reconstituted MIC profiles resembling those of the wild-type protein, while the other mutant forms showed variable MIC results. Utilizing the data from these experiments, in conjunction with multiple sequence alignments and structure predictions, an OprM topology model with 16 beta strands was proposed.  相似文献   

12.
MexAB-OprM, the multidrug efflux pump of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, contributes to the high resistance of this organism to a wide variety of antibiotics. To investigate the structure and function of OprM, the outer membrane channel of MexAB-OprM, we examined the oligomeric states of OprM and its homologues OprJ and OprN. These proteins were treated with crosslinking reagent after their reconstitution into liposome membranes. The crosslinked products indicated that OprM and OprN formed trimers, while OprJ unexpectedly appeared to form a tetramer. In order to test whether differences in oligomeric structure might be intimately related to channel function, we examined the channel-forming activity of these proteins by liposome swelling assay. However, no significant differences in channel characteristics were detected among OprM, OprJ, and OprN. We proposed the probable explanation for the diversity in the oligomeric structure of the channel proteins.  相似文献   

13.
OprM and OprN belong to the outer membrane factor family of multidrug efflux proteins from Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a bacterium responsible of nosocomial infections. We report here the two-dimensional (2D) crystallization of OprN and OprM into lipid bilayers and the determination of their 2D projected structure by cryo-electron crystallography, at 1 and 1.4 nm, respectively. Both proteins present a dense ring of protein density, of approximately 7 nm diameter. An additional thin peripheral ring is resolved in OprN structure. Both proteins are assembled as trimers. The results presented here indicate a high structural homology between OprN (and OprM) and TolC, a multidrug efflux protein from Escherichia coli.  相似文献   

14.
Drug efflux pumps of Gram-negative bacteria are tripartite export machineries located in the bacterial envelopes contributing to multidrug resistance. Protein structures of all three components have been determined, but the exact interaction sites are still unknown. We could confirm that the hybrid system composed of Pseudomonas aeruginosa channel tunnel OprM and the Escherichia coli inner membrane complex, formed by adaptor protein (membrane fusion protein) AcrA and transporter AcrB of the resistance nodulation cell division (RND) family, is not functional. However, cross-linking experiments show that the hybrid exporter assembles. Exchange of the hairpin domain of AcrA with the corresponding hairpin from adaptor protein MexA of P. aeruginosa restored the functionality. This shows the importance of the MexA hairpin domain for the functional interaction with the OprM channel tunnel. On the basis of these results, we have modeled the interaction of the hairpin domain and the channel tunnel on a molecular level for AcrA and TolC as well as MexA and OprM, respectively. The model of two hairpin docking sites per TolC protomer corresponding with hexameric adaptor proteins was confirmed by disulfide cross-linking experiments. The role of this interaction for functional efflux pumps is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
The outer membrane protein OprM of Pseudomonas aeruginosa is involved in intrinsic and mutational multiple-antibiotic resistance as part of two resistance-nodulation-division efflux systems. The crystal structure of TolC, a homologous protein in Escherichia coli, was recently published (V. Koronakis, A. Sharff, E. Koronakis, B. Luisl, and C. Hughes, Nature 405:914-919, 2000), demonstrating a distinctive architecture comprising outer membrane beta-barrel and periplasmic helical-barrel structures, which assemble differently from the common beta-barrel-only conformation of porins. Based on their sequence similarity, a similar content of alpha-helical and beta-sheet structure determined by circular dichroism spectroscopy, and our observation that OprM, like TolC, reconstitutes channels in planar bilayer membranes, OprM and TolC were considered to be structurally homologous, and a model of OprM was constructed by threading its sequence to the TolC crystal structure. Residues thought to be important for the TolC structure were conserved in space in this OprM model. Analyses of deletion mutants and previously isolated insertion mutants of OprM in the context of this model allowed us to propose roles for different protein domains. Our data indicate that the helical barrel of the protein is critical for both the function and the integrity of the protein, while a C-terminal domain localized around the equatorial plane of this helical barrel is dispensable. Extracellular loops appear to play a lesser role in substrate specificity for this efflux protein compared to classical porins, and there appears to be a correlation between the change in antimicrobial activity for OprM mutants and the pore size. Our model and channel formation studies support the "iris" mechanism of action for TolC and permit us now to form more focused hypotheses about the functional domains of OprM and its related family of efflux proteins.  相似文献   

16.
Using the biocide triclosan as a selective agent, several triclosan-resistant mutants of a susceptible Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain were isolated. Cloning and characterization of a DNA fragment conferring triclosan resistance from one of these mutants revealed a hitherto uncharacterized efflux system of the resistance nodulation cell division (RND) family, which was named MexJK and which is encoded by the mexJK operon. Expression of this operon is negatively regulated by the product of mexL, a gene located upstream of and transcribed divergently from mexJK. The triclosan-resistant mutant contained a single nucleotide change in mexL, which caused an amino acid change in the putative helix-turn-helix domain of MexL. The MexL protein belongs to the TetR family of repressor proteins. The MexJK system effluxed tetracycline and erythromycin but only in the presence of the outer membrane protein channel OprM; OprJ and OprN did not function with MexJK. Triclosan efflux required neither of the outer membrane protein channels tested but necessitated the MexJ membrane fusion protein and the MexK inner membrane RND transporter. The results presented in this study suggest that MexJK may function as a two-component RND pump for triclosan efflux but must associate with OprM to form a tripartite antibiotic efflux system. Furthermore, the results confirm that triclosan is an excellent tool for the study of RND multidrug efflux systems and that this popular biocide therefore readily selects mutants which are cross-resistant with antibiotics.  相似文献   

17.
The MexA,B-OprM efflux pump assembly of Pseudomonas aeruginosa consists of two inner membrane proteins and one outer membrane protein. The cytoplasmic membrane protein, MexB, appears to function as the xenobiotic-exporting subunit, whereas the MexA and OprM proteins are supposed to function as the membrane fusion protein and the outer membrane channel protein, respectively. Computer-aided hydropathy analyses of MexB predicted the presence of up to 17 potential transmembrane segments. To verify the prediction, we analyzed the membrane topology of MexB using the alkaline phosphatase gene fusion method. We obtained the following unique characteristics. MexB bears 12 membrane spanning segments leaving both the amino and carboxyl termini in the cytoplasmic side of the inner membrane. Both the first and fourth periplasmic loops had very long hydrophilic domains containing 311 and 314 amino acid residues, respectively. This fact suggests that these loops may interact with other pump subunits, such as the membrane fusion protein MexA and the outer membrane protein OprM. Alignment of the amino- and the carboxyl-terminal halves of MexB showed a 30% homology and transmembrane segments 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 could be overlaid with the segments 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, and 12, respectively. This result suggested that the MexB has a 2-fold repeat that strengthen the experimentally determined topology model. This paper reports the structure of the pump subunit, MexB, of the MexA,B-OprM efflux pump assembly. This is the first time to verify the topology of the resistant-nodulation-division efflux pump protein.  相似文献   

18.
The MexAB-OprM efflux pump of Pseudomonas aeruginosa is central to multidrug resistance of this organism, which infects immunocompromised hospital patients. The MexA, MexB, and OprM subunits were assumed to function as the membrane fusion protein, the body of the transporter, and the outer membrane channel protein, respectively. For better understanding of this important xenobiotic transporter, we show the x-ray crystallographic structure of MexA at a resolution of 2.40 A. The global MexA structure showed unforeseen new features with a spiral assembly of six and seven protomers that were joined together at one end by a pseudo 2-fold image. The protomer showed a new protein structure with a tandem arrangement consisting of at least three domains and presumably one more. The rod domain had a long hairpin of twisted coiled-coil that extended to one end. The second domain adjacent to the rod alpha-helical domain was globular and constructed by a cluster of eight short beta-sheets. The third domain located distal to the alpha-helical rod was globular and composed of seven short beta-sheets and one short alpha-helix. The 13-mer was shaped like a woven rattan cylinder with a large internal tubular space and widely opened flared ends. The 6-mer and 7-mer had a funnel-like structure consisting of a tubular rod at one side and a widely opened flared funnel top at the other side. Based on these results, we constructed a model of the MexAB-OprM pump assembly. The three pairs of MexA dimers interacted with the periplasmic alpha-barrel domain of OprM via the alpha-helical hairpin, the second domain interacted with both MexB and OprM at their contact site, and the third and disordered domains probably interacted with the distal domain of MexB. In this fashion, the MexA subunit connected MexB and OprM, indicating that MexA is the membrane bridge protein.  相似文献   

19.
Nehme D  Poole K 《Journal of bacteriology》2007,189(17):6118-6127
In an effort to identify key domains of the Pseudomonas aeruginosa MexAB-OprM drug efflux system involved in component interactions, extragenic suppressors of various inactivating mutations in individual pump constituents were isolated and studied. The multidrug hypersusceptibility of P. aeruginosa expressing MexB with a mutation in a region of the protein implicated in oligomerization (G220S) was suppressed by mutations in the alpha/beta domain of MexA. MexB(G220S) showed a reduced ability to bind MexA in vivo while representative MexA suppressors (V66M and V259F) restored the MexA-MexB interaction. Interestingly, these suppressors also restored resistance in P. aeruginosa expressing OprM proteins with mutations at the proximal (periplasmic) tip of OprM that is predicted to interact with MexB, suggesting that these suppressors generally overcame defects in MexA-MexB and MexB-OprM interaction. The multidrug hypersusceptibility arising from a mutation in the helical hairpin of MexA implicated in OprM interaction (V129M) was suppressed by mutations (T198I and F439I) in the periplasmic alpha-helical barrel of OprM. Again, the MexA mutation compromised an in vivo interaction with OprM that was restored by the T198I and F439I substitutions in OprM, consistent with the hairpin domain mediating MexA binding to this region of OprM. Interestingly, these OprM suppressor mutations restored multidrug resistance in P. aeruginosa expressing MexB(G220S). Finally, the oprM(T198I) suppressor mutation enhanced the yields of all three constituents of a MexA-MexB-OprM(T198I) pump as detected in whole-cell extracts. These data highlight the importance of MexA and interactions with this adapter in promoting MexAB-OprM pump assembly and in stabilizing the pump complex.  相似文献   

20.
The genome of Pseudomonas aeruginosa encodes tripartite efflux pumps that extrude functionally and structurally dissimilar antibiotics from the bacterial cell. MexAB‐OprM, MexCD‐OprJ, MexEF‐OprN, and MexXY‐OprM are the main tripartite efflux pumps responsible for multidrug resistance in P. aeruginosa. The outer membrane factors OprN, OprJ, and OprM are essential components of functional tripartite efflux pumps. To elucidate the structural basis of multidrug resistance, we determined the crystal structures of OprN and OprJ. These structures revealed several features, including tri‐acylation of the N‐terminal cysteine, a small pore in the β‐barrel domain, and a tightly sealed gate in the α‐barrel domain. Despite the overall similarity of OprN, OprJ, and OprM, a comparison of their structures and electrostatic distributions revealed subtle differences at the periplasmic end of the α‐barrel domain. These results suggested that the overall structures of these outer membrane factors are specifically optimized for particular tripartite efflux pumps. Proteins 2016; 84:759–769. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

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