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1.
Wallace IS  Roberts DM 《Plant physiology》2004,135(2):1059-1068
Major intrinsic proteins (MIPs) are a family of membrane channels that facilitate the bidirectional transport of water and small uncharged solutes such as glycerol. The 35 full-length members of the MIP family in Arabidopsis are segregated into four structurally homologous subfamilies: plasma membrane intrinsic proteins (PIPs), tonoplast intrinsic proteins (TIPs), nodulin 26-like intrinsic membrane proteins (NIPs), and small basic intrinsic proteins (SIPs). Computational methods were used to construct structural models of the putative pore regions of various plant MIPs based on homology modeling with the atomic resolution crystal structures of mammalian aquaporin 1 and the bacterial glycerol permease GlpF. Based on comparisons of the narrow selectivity filter regions (the aromatic/Arg [ar/R] filter), the members of the four phylogenetic subfamilies of Arabidopsis MIPs can be classified into eight groups. PIPs possess a uniform ar/R signature characteristic of high water transport aquaporins, whereas TIPs are highly diverse with three separate conserved ar/R regions. NIPs possess two separate conserved ar/R regions, one that is similar to the archetype, soybean (Glycine max) nodulin 26, and another that is characteristic of Arabidopsis NIP6;1. The SIP subfamily possesses two ar/R subgroups, characteristic of either SIP1 or SIP2. Both SIP ar/R residues are divergent from all other MIPs in plants and other kingdoms. Overall, these findings suggest that higher plant MIPs have a common fold but show distinct differences in proposed pore apertures, potential to form hydrogen bonds with transported molecules, and amphiphilicity that likely results in divergent transport selectivities.  相似文献   

2.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION: MIPs (major intrinsic proteins) form channels across biological membranes that control recruitment of water and small solutes such as glycerol and urea in all living organisms. Because of their widespread occurrence and large number, MIPs are a sound model system to understand evolutionary mechanisms underlying the generation of protein structural and functional diversity. With the recent increase in genomic projects, there is a considerable increase in the quantity and taxonomic range of MIPs in molecular databases. RESULTS: In the present study, I compiled more than 450 non-redundant amino acid sequences of MIPs from NCBI databases. Phylogenetic analyses using Bayesian inference reconstructed a statistically robust tree that allowed the classification of members of the family into two main evolutionary groups, the GLPs (glycerol-uptake facilitators or aquaglyceroporins) and the water transport channels or AQPs (aquaporins). Separate phylogenetic analyses of each of the MIP subfamilies were performed to determine the main groups of orthology. In addition, comparative sequence analyses were conducted to identify conserved signatures in the MIP molecule. CONCLUSIONS: The earliest and major gene duplication event in the history of the MIP family led to its main functional split into GLPs and AQPs. GLPs show typically one single copy in microbes (eubacteria, archaea and fungi), up to four paralogues in vertebrates and they are absent from plants. AQPs are usually single in microbes and show their greatest numbers and diversity in angiosperms and vertebrates. Functional recruitment of NOD26-like intrinsic proteins to glycerol transport due to the absence of GLPs in plants was highly supported. Acquisition of other MIP functions such as permeability to ammonia, arsenite or CO2 is restricted to particular MIP paralogues. Up to eight fairly conserved boxes were inferred in the primary sequence of the MIP molecule. All of them mapped on to one side of the channel except the conserved glycine residues from helices 2 and 5 that were found in the opposite side.  相似文献   

3.
Bae EK  Lee H  Lee JS  Noh EW 《Gene》2011,483(1-2):43-48
Water uptake across cell membranes is a principal requirement for plant growth at both the cellular and whole-plant levels; water movement through plant membranes is regulated by aquaporins (AQPs) or major intrinsic proteins (MIPs). We examined the expression characteristics of the poplar plasma membrane intrinsic protein 1 gene (PatPIP1), a type of MIP, which was isolated from a suspension cell cDNA library of Populus alba×P. tremula var. glandulosa. Examination of protoplasts expressing the p35S-PatPIP1::sGFP fusion protein revealed that the protein was localized in the plasma membrane. Northern blot analysis revealed that the gene was strongly expressed in poplar roots and leaves. Gene expression was inducible by abiotic factors including drought, salinity, cold temperatures and wounding, and also by plant hormones including gibberellic acid, jasmonic acid and salicylic acid. Since we found that the PatPIP1 gene was strongly expressed in response to mannitol, NaCl, jasmonic acid and wounding, we propose that PatPIP1 plays an essential role in the defense of plants against water stress.  相似文献   

4.
A new subfamily of major intrinsic proteins in plants   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
The major intrinsic proteins (MIPs) form a large protein family of ancient origin and are found in bacteria, fungi, animals, and plants. MIPs act as channels in membranes to facilitate passive transport across the membrane. Some MIPs allow small polar molecules like glycerol or urea to pass through the membrane. However, the majority of MIPs are thought to be aquaporins (AQPs), i.e., they are specific for water transport. Plant MIPs can be subdivided into the plasma membrane intrinsic protein, tonoplast intrinsic protein, and NOD26-like intrinsic protein subfamilies. By database mining and phylogenetic analyses, we have identified a new subfamily in plants, the Small basic Intrinsic Proteins (SIPs). Comparisons of sequences from the new subfamily with conserved amino acid residues in other MIPs reveal characteristic features of SIPs. Possible functional consequences of these features are discussed in relation to the recently solved structures of AQP1 and GlpF. We suggest that substitutions at conserved and structurally important positions imply a different substrate specificity for the new subfamily.  相似文献   

5.
Three aspects have to be taken into consideration when discussing cellular water and solute permeability of fungal cells: cell wall properties, membrane permeability, and transport through proteinaceous pores (the main focus of this review). Yet, characterized major intrinsic proteins (MIPs) can be grouped into three functional categories: (mainly) water transporting aquaporins, aquaglyceroporins that confer preferentially solute permeability (e.g., glycerol and ammonia), and bifunctional aquaglyceroporins that can facilitate efficient water and solute transfer. Two ancestor proteins, a water (orthodox aquaporin) and a solute facilitator (aquaglyceroporin), are supposed to give rise to today’s MIPs. Based on primary sequences of fungal MIPs, orthodox aquaporins/X-intrinsic proteins (XIPs) and FPS1-like/Yfl054-like/other aquaglyceroporins are supposed to be respective sister groups. However, at least within the fungal kingdom, no easy functional conclusion can be drawn from the phylogenetic position of a given protein within the MIP pedigree. In consequence, ecophysiological prediction of MIP relevance is not feasible without detailed functional analysis of the respective protein and expression studies. To illuminate the diverse MIP implications in fungal lifestyle, our current knowledge about protein function in two organisms, baker’s yeast and the Basidiomycotic Laccaria bicolor, an ectomycorrhizal model fungus, was exemplarily summarized in this review. MIP function has been investigated in such a depth in Saccharomyces cerevisiae that a system-wide view is possible. Yeast lifestyle, however, is special in many circumstances. Therefore, L. bicolor as filamentous Basidiomycete was added and allows insight into a very different way of life. Special emphasis was laid in this review onto ecophysiological interpretation of MIP function.  相似文献   

6.

Background  

The major intrinsic proteins (MIPs) facilitate the transport of water and neutral solutes across the lipid bilayers. Plant MIPs are believed to be important in cell division and expansion and in water transport properties in response to environmental conditions. More than 30 MIP sequences have been identified in Arabidopsis thaliana, maize and rice. Plasma membrane intrinsic proteins (PIPs), tonoplast intrinsic proteins (TIPs), Nod26-like intrinsic protein (NIPs) and small and basic intrinsic proteins (SIPs) are subfamilies of plant MIPs. Despite sequence diversity, all the experimentally determined structures belonging to the MIP superfamily have the same "hour-glass" fold.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Water-selective and multifunctional aquaporins from Lotus japonicus nodules   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Guenther JF  Roberts DM 《Planta》2000,210(5):741-748
  相似文献   

9.
A new subfamily LIP of the major intrinsic proteins   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  

Background

Proteins of the major intrinsic protein (MIP) family, or aquaporins, have been detected in almost all organisms. These proteins are important in cells and organisms because they allow for passive transmembrane transport of water and other small, uncharged polar molecules.

Results

We compared the predicted amino acid sequences of 20 MIPs from several algae species of the phylum Heterokontophyta (Kingdom Chromista) with the sequences of MIPs from other organisms. Multiple sequence alignments revealed motifs that were homologous to functionally important NPA motifs and the so-called ar/R-selective filter of glyceroporins and aquaporins. The MIP sequences of the studied chromists fell into several clusters that belonged to different groups of MIPs from a wide variety of organisms from different Kingdoms. Two of these proteins belong to Plasma membrane intrinsic proteins (PIPs), four of them belong to GlpF-like intrinsic proteins (GIPs), and one of them belongs to a specific MIPE subfamily from green algae. Three proteins belong to the unclassified MIPs, two of which are of bacterial origin. Eight of the studied MIPs contain an NPM-motif in place of the second conserved NPA-motif typical of the majority of MIPs. The MIPs of heterokonts within all detected clusters can differ from other MIPs in the same cluster regarding the structure of the ar/R-selective filter and other generally conserved motifs.

Conclusions

We proposed placing nine MIPs from heterokonts into a new group, which we have named the LIPs (large intrinsic proteins). The possible substrate specificities of the studied MIPs are discussed.

Electronic supplementary material

The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1471-2164-15-173) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

10.
11.
The role of aquaporins in cellular and whole plant water balance   总被引:48,自引:0,他引:48  
Aquaporins are water channel proteins belonging to the major intrinsic protein (MIP) superfamily of membrane proteins. More than 150 MIPs have been identified in organisms ranging from bacteria to animals and plants. In plants, aquaporins are present in the plasma membrane and in the vacuolar membrane where they are abundant constituents. Functional studies of aquaporins have hitherto mainly been performed by heterologous expression in Xenopus oocytes. A main issue is now to understand their role in the plant, where they are likely to be important both at the cellular and at the whole plant level. Plants contain a large number of aquaporin isoforms with distinct cell type- and tissue-specific expression patterns. Some of these are constitutively expressed, whereas the expression of others is regulated in response to environmental factors, such as drought and salinity. At the protein level, regulation of water transport activity by phosphorylation has been reported for some aquaporins.  相似文献   

12.
Wallace IS  Roberts DM 《Biochemistry》2005,44(51):16826-16834
Major intrinsic proteins (MIPs) are a diverse class of integral membrane proteins that facilitate the transport of water and some small solutes across cellular membranes. X-ray structures of MIPs indicate that a tetrad of residues (the ar/R region) form a narrow pore constriction that constitutes the selectivity filter. In comparison with mammalian and microbial species, plants have a greater number and diversity of MIPs with greater than 30 genes encoding four phylogenetic subfamilies with eight different classes of ar/R sequences. The nodulin 26-like intrinsic protein (NIP) subfamily in Arabidopsis can be subdivided into two ar/R subgroups: the NIP subgroup I, which resembles the archetype of the family, soybean nodulin 26, and the NIP subgroup II, which is represented by the Arabidopsis protein AtNIP6;1. These two NIPs differ principally by the substitution of a conserved alanine (NIP subgroup II) for a conserved tryptophan (NIP subgroup I) in the helix 2 position (H2) of the ar/R filter. A comparison of the water and solute tranport properties of the two proteins was performed by expression in Xenopus laevis oocytes. Nodulin 26 is an aquaglyceroporin with a modest osmotic water permeability (P(f)) and the ability to transport uncharged solutes such as glycerol and formamide. In constrast, AtNIP6;1 showed no measurable water permeability but transported glycerol, formamide, as well as larger solutes that were impermeable to nodulin 26. By site-directed mutagenesis, we show that the H2 position is the crucial determinant that confers these transport behaviors. A comparison of the NIPs and tonoplast-intrinsic proteins (TIP) shows that the H2 residue can predict the transport profile for water and glycerol with histidine found in TIP-like aquaporins, tryptophan found in aquaglyceroporins (NIP I), and alanine found in water-impermeable glyceroporins (AtNIP6;1).  相似文献   

13.
14.
DiP , a gene from Antirrhinum majus , which encodes a protein with striking homology to other integral membrane proteins, was cloned. The gene was specifically expressed in mature seeds and during seedling germination, particularly in cotyledons of seedlings grown in the dark. The deduced product, called DiP, for dark intrinsic protein, shows strong homology with the MIP family of channel transporters which include; the bovine major intrinsic protein (MIP), the Escherichia coli glycerol facilitator (GlpF), the peribacteroid nodulin-26 (Nod26), and the tonoplast protein from kidney bean (TIP). DiP is most similar to other plant members of this family, and in particular to the tobacco protein TobRB7 which is expressed specifically in roots. However, the expression pattern of diP suggests that its product is functionally more similar to the tonoplast intrinsic protein from kidney bean since it is most highly expressed in the cotyledons of germinating seedlings, before the cells undergo expansion growth and become photosynthetic.  相似文献   

15.
By searching a Chlamydomonas expressed sequence tag database and by comparing the retrieved data with homologous sequences from a DNA database, we identified an expressed Chlamydomonas reinhardtii putative major intrinsic protein (MIP) gene. The nucleotide sequence, consisting of 1,631 bp, contains an open reading frame coding for a 300-amino-acid protein named CrMIP1. It possesses conserved NPA motifs, but is not highly homologous to known aquaporins. CrMIP1 was expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and assayed for water and glycerol transport activity. By the stopped-flow spectrophotometric assay, CrMIP1 did not enhance the osmotic water permeability of membrane vesicles of the yeast transformant. However, the transformant cells showed glycerol transport activity in the in vivo assay using [14C]glycerol. This is the first report on the isolation and functional identification of a MIP member from algae.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Major intrinsic proteins (MIPs) transport water and uncharged solutes across membranes in all kingdoms of life. Recently, an uncharacterized MIP subfamily was identified in the genomes of plants and fungi and named X Intrinsic Proteins (XIPs). Here, we describe the genetic features, localization, expression, and functions of a group of Solanaceae XIPs. XIP cDNA and gDNA were cloned from tobacco, potato, tomato, and morning glory. A conserved sequence motif in the first intron of Solanaceae XIPs initiates an RNA-processing mechanism that results in two splice variants (α and β). When transiently or stably expressed in tobacco plants, yellow fluorescent protein-tagged NtXIP1;1α and NtXIP1;1β were both localized in the plasma membrane. Transgenic tobacco lines expressing NtXIP1;1-promoter-GUS constructs and RT-PCR studies showed that NtXIP1;1 was expressed in all organs. The NtXIP1;1 promoter was mainly active in cell layers facing the environment in all above-ground tissues. Heterologous expression of Solanaceae XIPs in Xenopus laevis oocytes and various Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutants demonstrated that these isoforms facilitate the transport of bulky solutes, such as glycerol, urea, and boric acid. In contrast, permeability for water was undetectable. These data suggest that XIPs function in the transport of uncharged solutes across the cell plasma membrane in specific plant tissues, including at the interface between the environment and external cell layers.  相似文献   

18.
Abstract

The major intrinsic protein (MIP) of the bovine lens fiber cell membrane was the first member of the MIP family of proteins to be sequenced and characterized. It is probably a homotetramer with transmembrane channel activity that plays a role in lens biogenesis or maintenance. The polypeptide chain of each subunit may span the membrane six times, and both the N- and C-termini face the cell cytoplasm. Eighteen sequenced or partially sequenced proteins from bacteria, yeast, plants, and animals have now been shown to be members of the MIP family. These proteins appear to function in (1) metazoan development and neurogenesis (MIP and BIB), (2) water transport across the human erythrocyte membrane (ChIP), (3) communication between host plant cells and symbiotic nitrogen-fixing bacteria (NOD), (4) transport across the tonoplast membrane during plant seed development (α-TIP), (5) water stress-induced resistance to desiccation in plants (Wsi-TIP), (6) suppression of a genetic growth defect on fermentable sugars in yeast (FPS1), and (7) transport of glycerol across bacterial cell membranes (GlpF). One other sequenced member of the MIP family (ORF1 of Lactococcus lactis) has no known physiological function. The biochemical functions of the eukaryotic proteins are not well established.

Computer analyses have revealed that the first and second halves of all MTP family proteins probably arose by a tandem, intragenic, duplication event. Thus, the primary structure of putative transmembrane helices 1 to 3 is similar to that of putative transmembrane helices 4 to 6 even though they are of opposite orientation in the membrane. Among the most conserved residues in these two repeated halves are a membrane-embedded glutamate (E) in helices 1 and 4, an asparagine-proline-alanine (NPA) sequence in the loops between helices 2 and 3 (cytoplasmically localized) and helices 5 and 6 (extracellularly localized), and a glycine within helices 3 and 6. Statistical analyses suggest that the two halves of these proteins have evolved to serve distinct functions: the first half is more important for the generalized or common functions of these proteins, while the second half of these proteins is more differentiated to provide specific or dissimilar functions of the proteins. The apparent origin of MIP family proteins by duplication of a three-spanner precursor protein suggests an evolutionary origin distinct from other transport proteins with six transmembrane spanners. Based on the phylogenetic tree for the 18 sequenced members of the MTP family, we propose that a single, primordial gene arose in prokaryotes shortly before the emergence of eukaryotes, mat this gene was vertically transmitted to the principal eukaryotic kingdoms, and that subsequent gene duplication and divergence events gave rise to kingdom-related subfamilies or clusters of the MIP family.  相似文献   

19.
Members of the major intrinsic protein (MIP) family, described in plants as water-selective channels (aquaporins), can also transport small neutral solutes in other organisms. In the present work, we characterize the permeability of plant vacuolar membrane (tonoplast; TP) and plasma membrane (PM) to non-electrolytes and evaluate the contribution of MIP homologues to such transport. PM and TP vesicles were purified from tobacco suspension cells by free-flow electrophoresis, and membrane permeabilities for a wide range of neutral solutes including urea, polyols of different molecular size, and amino acids were investigated by stopped-flow spectrofluorimetry. For all solutes tested, TP vesicles were found to be more permeable than their PM counterparts, with for instance urea permeabilities from influx experiments of 74.9 +/- 9.6 x 10(-6) and 1.0 +/- 0.3 x 10(-6) cm sec-1, respectively. Glycerol and urea transport in TP vesicles exhibited features of a facilitated diffusion process. This and the high channel-mediated permeability of the same TP vesicles to water suggested a common role for MIP proteins in water and solute transport. A cDNA encoding a novel tonoplast intrinsic protein (TIP) homologue named Nicotiana tabacum TIPa (Nt-TIPa) was isolated from tobacco cells. Immunodetection of Nt-TIPa in purified membrane fractions confirmed that the protein is localized in the TP. Functional expression of Nt-TIPa in Xenopus oocytes showed this protein to be permeable to water and solutes such as urea and glycerol. These features could account for the transport selectivity profile determined in purified TP vesicles. These results support the idea that plant aquaporins have a dual function in water and solute transport. Because Nt-TIPa diverges in sequence from solute permeable aquaporins characterized in other organisms, its identification also provides a novel tool for investigating the molecular determinants of aquaporin transport selectivity.  相似文献   

20.
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