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1.
The role of the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphotransferase system (PTS) in the phenomenon of inducer exclusion was examined in whole cells of Salmonella typhimurium which carried the genes of the Escherichia coli lactose operon on an episome. In the presence of the PTS substrate methyl alpha-D-glucopyranoside, the extent of accumulation of the lactose analog methyl beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside was reduced. A strain carrying a mutation in the gene for Enzyme I was hypersensitive to the PTS effect, while a crr mutant strain was completely resistant. Influx, efflux, and exchange of galactosides via the lactose "permease" were inhibited by methyl alpha-glucoside. This inhibition occurred in the presence of metabolic energy poisons, and therefore does not involve either the generation of metabolic energy or energy-coupling to the lactose transport system. When the cellular content of the lactose permease was increased by induction with isopropyl beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside, cells gradually became less sensitive to inducer exclusion. The extent of inhibition of methyl beta-thiogalactoside accumulation by methyl alpha-glucoside was shown to be dependent on the relative cellular content of the PTS and lactose system. The data were consistent with an hypothesis involving partial inactivation of galactoside transport due to interaction between a component of the PTS and the lactose permease. By examination of the effects of the PTS and lactose uptake and melibiose permease-mediated uptake of methyl beta-thiogalactoside, it was further shown that the manner in which inducer exclusion is expressed is independent on the routes available to the non-PTS sugar for exit from the cell.  相似文献   

2.
An Escherichia coli strain which overproduces the lactose permease was used to investigate the mechanism of allosteric regulation of this permease and those specific for melibiose, glycerol, and maltose by the phosphoenolpyruvate-sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS). Thio-beta-digalactoside, a high affinity substrate of the lactose permease, released the glycerol and maltose permeases from inhibition by methyl-alpha-d-glucoside. Resumption of glycerol uptake occurred immediately upon addition of the galactoside. The effect was not observed in a strain which lacked or contained normal levels of the lactose permease, but growth of wild-type E. coli in the presence of isopropyl-beta-thiogalactoside plus cyclic AMP resulted in enhanced synthesis of the lactose permease so that galactosides relieved inhibition of glycerol uptake. Thiodigalactoside also relieved the inhibition of glycerol uptake caused by the presence of other PTS substrates such as fructose, mannitol, glucose, 2-deoxyglucose, and 5-thioglucose. Inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity by methyl-alpha-glucoside was also relieved by thiodigalactoside in E. coli T52RT provided that the lactose permease protein was induced to high levels. Cooperative binding of sugar and enzyme III(Glc) to the melibiose permease in Salmonella typhimurium was demonstrated, but no cooperativity was noted with the glycerol and maltose permeases. These results are consistent with a mechanism of PTS-mediated regulation of the lactose and melibiose permeases involving a fixed number of allosteric regulatory proteins (enzyme III(Glc)) which may be titrated by the increased number of substrate-activated permease proteins. This work suggests that the cooperativity in the binding of sugar substrate and enzyme III(Glc) to the permease, demonstrated previously in in vitro experiments, has mechanistic significance in vivo. It substantiates the conclusion that PTS-mediated regulation of non-PTS permease activities involves direct allosteric interaction between the permeases and enzyme III(Glc), the postulated regulatory protein of the PTS.  相似文献   

3.
We have examined the substrate selectivity of the melibiose permease (MelY) from Enterobacter cloacae in comparison with that of the lactose permease (LacY) from Escherichia coli. Both proteins catalyze active transport of lactose or melibiose with comparable affinity and capacity. However, MelY does not transport the analogue methyl-1-thio-β,d-galactopyranoside (TMG), which is a very efficient substrate in LacY. We show that MelY binds TMG and conserves Cys148 (helix V) as a TMG binding residue but fails to transport this ligand. Based on homology modeling, organization of the putative MelY sugar binding site is the same as that in LacY and residues irreplaceable for the symport mechanism are conserved. Moreover, only 15% of the residues where a single-Cys mutant is inactivated by site-directed alkylation differ in MelY. Using site-directed mutagenesis at these positions and engineered cross-homolog chimeras, we show that Val367, at the periplasmic end of transmembrane helix XI, contributes in defining the substrate selectivity profile. Replacement of Val367 with the MelY residue (Ala) leads to impairment of TMG uptake. Exchanging domains N6 and C6 between LacY and MelY also leads to impairment of TMG uptake. TMG uptake activity is restored by the re-introduction of a Val367 in the background of chimera N6(LacY)-C6(MelY). Much less prominent effects are found with the same mutants and chimeras for the transport of lactose or melibiose.  相似文献   

4.
Allosteric regulation of several sugar transport systems such as those specific for lactose, maltose and melibiose in Escherichia coli (inducer exclusion) is mediated by the glucose-specific enzyme IIA (IIAGlc) of the phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS). Deletion mutations in the cytoplasmic N and C termini of the lactose permease protein, LacY, and replacement of all cysteine residues in LacY with other residues did not prevent IIAGlc-mediated inhibition of lactose uptake, but several point and insertional mutations in the central cytoplasmic loop of this permease abolished transport regulation and IIAGlc binding. The results substantiate the conclusion that regulation of the lactose permease in E. coli by the PTS is mediated by a primary interaction of IIAGlc with the central cytoplasmic loop of the permease.  相似文献   

5.
F Kepes 《Biochimie》1985,67(1):69-73
At the steady-state of accumulation of intracellular lactose by the beta-galactoside permease of Escherichia coli, the rate of efflux of the substrate is equal to its rate of influx. An original experimental method and a mathematical processing of the experimental data are proposed to evaluate the relative involvements of the permease-mediated pathway and of the diffusion component in this efflux. The method consists of inducing the lac operon of the bacteria, and then of removing the inducer and allowing the cells to grow further. The permease content and the membrane surface of diffusion are thus varying independently in such a "de-induction" experiment, along which lactose uptake has been monitored at different times. The analysis of the experimental data show that, under conditions of maximal induction, over 95% of the efflux passes through the energized permease. The relevant parameters of the efflux of lactose have been computed and their values allow the prediction of most classical observations, as well as the prediction, never checked, that under physiological conditions, the higher the external substrate concentration, the higher the permease-mediated efflux, according to a saturation kinetics.  相似文献   

6.
Melibiose transport of Escherichia coli.   总被引:4,自引:3,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
K Tanaka  S Niiya    T Tsuchiya 《Journal of bacteriology》1980,141(3):1031-1036
Transport of [3H]melibiose, prepared from [3H]raffinose, was investigated in Escherichia coli. Na+ stimulated the transport of melibiose via the melibiose system, whereas Li+ inhibited it. Kinetic parameters of melibiose transport were determined. The Kt values were 0.57 mM in the absence of Na+ or Li+, 0.27 mM in the presence of 10 mM NaCl, and 0.29 mM in the presence of 10 mM LiCl. The Vmax values were 40 and 46 nmol/min per mg of protein in the absence and in the presence of NaCl and 18 nmol/min per mg of protein in the presence of LiCl. Melibiose transport via the melibiose system was temperature sensitive in a wild-type strain of Escherichia coli and was not inhibited by lactose. On the other hand, melibiose uptake via the lactose system was not temperature sensitive, was inhibited by lactose, and was not affected by Na+ and Li+. Methyl-beta-D-thiogalactoside, a substrate for both systems, inhibited the transport of melibiose via both systems.  相似文献   

7.
The uptake of galactosides into Escherichia coli via the lactose permease was studied in the time range 0.01-10s by rapid mixing and quenched flow. An initial transient was observed under two conditions. Firstly, a lag in the approach to the steady state was observed at low galactoside concentrations (less than Km). Secondly, a burst of uptake was observed when anaerobic cell suspensions were mixed with aerobic substrate solutions. However, the cause of the burst of uptake appears to be a burst in the rate of respiration. The rate of galactoside uptake during this phase is 10-fold greater than during the steady state.  相似文献   

8.
The accompanying articles (Saffen, D.W., Presper, K.A., Doering, T.L., and Roseman, S. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 16241-16253; Mitchell, W.J., Saffen, D. W., and Roseman, S. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 16254-16260) show that "inducer exclusion" in intact cells of Escherichia coli is regulated by IIIGlc, a protein encoded by the crr gene of the phosphoenolpyruvate:glycose phosphotransferase system (PTS). The present studies attempt to show a direct effect of IIIGlc on non-PTS transport systems. Inner membrane vesicles prepared from a wild type strain of Salmonella typhimurium (pts+), carrying the E. coli lactose operon on an episome, showed respiration-dependent accumulation of methyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside (TMG) via the lactose permease. In the presence of methyl-alpha-D-glucopyranoside or other PTS sugars, TMG uptake was reduced by an amount which was dependent on the relative concentrations of IIIGlc and lactose permease in the vesicles. The endogenous IIIGlc concentration in these vesicles was in the range 5-10 microM, similar to that found in whole cells. Methyl-alpha-glucoside had no effect on lactose permease activity in vesicles prepared from a deletion mutant strain lacking the soluble PTS proteins Enzyme I, HPr, and IIIGlc. One or more of the pure proteins could be inserted into the mutant vesicles; when one of the two electrophoretically distinguishable forms of the phosphocarrier protein, IIIGlc Slow, was inserted, both the initial rate and steady state level of TMG accumulation were reduced by up to 40%. The second electrophoretic form, IIIGlc Fast, had much less effect. A direct relationship was observed between the intravesicular concentration of IIIGlc Slow and the extent of inhibition of the lactose permease. No inhibition was observed when IIIGlc Slow was added to the outside of the vesicles, indicating that the site of interaction with the lactose permease is accessible only from the inner face of the membrane. In addition to the lactose permease, IIIGlc Slow was found to inhibit both the galactose and the melibiose permeases. Uptake of proline, on the other hand, was unaffected. The results are therefore consistent with an hypothesis that dephosphorylated IIIGlc Slow is an inhibitor of certain non-PTS permeases.  相似文献   

9.
1. A number of galactosides and other sugar compounds were examined as inhibitors of facilitated or active transport by the lactose permease system of Escherichia coli. Efficient inhibition required an alpha- or beta-anomeric galactopyranosyl ring of D-configuration, a free 6-hydroxyl group, and a certain aglycone size which was reached, for example, by monosaccharide or nitrophenyl substituents. 2. Aromatic alpha-D-galactopyranosides acted as high-affinity inhibitors (Ki, below 50 micrometer). At least two of them were not transported, in contrast to alpha-galactoside disaccharides and to aromatic beta-D-galactopyranosides. 3. beta-D-Galactoside transport was not significantly inhibited by specific inhibitors and transitionstate analogues of beta-galactosidase (D-galactal, D-galactonolascone). 4. The beta-D-galactopyranoside, lactitol, and alpha-D-galactopyranoside, galactinol, were not efficiently bound by the lactose permease system, although the maximal rate of uptake of lacitol was similar to that of lactose. By comparison with several structurally related D-galactopyranosides, the decreased affinity was attributed to an effect of the membrane/water interface. A model for substrate recognition by the lactose permease system is presented.  相似文献   

10.
Thiomethyl-beta-galactoside (TMG) accumulation via the melibiose transport system was studied in lactose transport-negative strains of Escherichia coli. TMG uptake by either intact cells or membrane vesicles was markedly stimulated by Na+ or Li+ between pH 5.5 and 8. The Km for uptake of TMG was approximately 0.2 mM at an external Na+ concentration of 5 mM (pH 7). The alpha-galactosides, melibiose, methyl-alpha-galactoside, and o-nitrophenyl-alpha-galactoside had a high affinity for this system whereas lactose, maltose and glucose had none. Evidence is presented for Li+-TMG or Na+-TMG cotransport.  相似文献   

11.
Several carbohydrate permease systems in Salmonella typhimurium and Escherichia coli are sensitive to regulation by the phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system. Mutant Salmonella strains were isolated in which individual transport systems had been rendered insensitive to regulation by sugar substrates of the phosphotransferase system. In one such strain, glycerol uptake was insensitive to regulation; in another, the maltose transport system was resistant to inhibition; and in a third, the regulatory mutation specifically rendered the melibiose permease insensitive to regulation. An analogous mutation in E. coli abolished inhibition of the transport of beta-galactosides via the lactose permease system. The mutations were mapped near the genes which code for the affected transport proteins. The regulatory mutations rendered utilization of the particular carbohydrates resistant to inhibition and synthesis of the corresponding catabolic enzymes partially insensitive to repressive control by sugar substrates of the phosphotransferase system. Studies of repression of beta-galactosidase synthesis in E. coli were conducted with both lactose and isopropyl beta-thiogalactoside as exogenous sources of inducer. Employing high concentrations of isopropyl beta-thiogalactoside, repression of beta-galactosidase synthesis was not altered by the lactose-specific transport regulation-resistant mutation. By contrast, the more severe repression observed with lactose as the exogenous source of inducer was partially abolished by this regulatory mutation. The results support the conclusions that several transport systems, including the lactose permease system, are subject to allosteric regulation and that inhibition of inducer uptake is a primary cause of the repression of catabolic enzyme synthesis.  相似文献   

12.
Transport and hydrolysis of disaccharides by Trichosporon cutaneum.   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Trichosporon cutaneum is shown to utilize six disaccharides, cellobiose, maltose, lactose, sucrose, melibiose, and trehalose. T. cutaneum can thus be counted with the rather restricted group of yeasts (11 to 12% of all investigated) which can utilize lactose and melibiose. The half-saturation constants for uptake were 10 +/- 3 mM sucrose or lactose and 5 +/- 1 mM maltose, which is of the same order of magnitude as those reported for Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Our results indicate that maltose shares a common transport system with sucrose and that there may be some interaction between the uptake systems for lactose, cellobiose, and glucose. Lactose, cellobiose, and melibiose are hydrolyzed by cell wall-bound glycosidase(s), suggesting hydrolysis before or in connection with uptake. In contrast, maltose, sucrose, and trehalose seem to be taken up as such. The uptake of sucrose and lactose is dependent on a proton gradient across the cell membrane. In contrast, there were no indications of the involvement of gradients of H+, K+, or Na+ in the uptake of maltose. The uptake of lactose is to a large extent inducible, as is the corresponding glycosidase. Also the glycosidases for cellobiose, trehalose, and melibiose are inducible. In contrast, the uptake of sucrose and maltose and the corresponding glycosidases is constitutive.  相似文献   

13.
The sugar specificity properties of the lactose permease were investigated. Free galactose was shown to competitively inhibit the lactose permease yielding a Ki value of 7.4 mM. This value was severalfold higher than the observed Km for lactose (1.3 mM). A variety of other monosaccharides also showed significant inhibition of lactose transport. With regard to -OH groups along the galactose ring it appears that the relative importance is OH-3 greater than OH-4 greater than OH-6 greater than OH-2 greater than OH-1. In general, galactosides with alpha-linkages exhibited significantly higher affinities compared with their beta-linked counterparts. An optimal size for the aglycone portion of the galactoside was reached with aglycones containing hexose residues or a benzene ring. The preferred size of the aglycone appears to be hexose, benzene ring greater than methyl group greater than no aglycone much greater than disaccharide greater than trisaccharide. However, neither the specific structure of the aglycone nor its relative hydrophobicity appeared to be important factors in permease recognition. For example, the hydrophobic beta-nitrophenyl-galactosides had lower affinities compared with lactose (a beta-galactoside), whereas the alpha-nitrophenylgalactosides generally had higher affinities compared with melibiose (an alpha-galactoside). In addition, no consistent preference was seen when considering the location of the nitro group on the benzene ring. From this work, a model is presented which depicts the binding of galactosides to the lactose permease.  相似文献   

14.
The mechanism of melibiose symport by the melibiose permease of Escherichia coli was studied by looking at the modifications of the facilitated diffusion properties of the permease which arise upon substitution of the coupled cations (H+, Na+, or Li+). Kinetic analysis of melibiose influx and efflux down a concentration gradient, exchange at equilibrium, and counterflow were examined in de-energized membrane vesicles resuspended in media allowing melibiose to be co-transported with either H+, Na+, or Li+. The data show that the maximal rates of melibiose efflux coupled to either H+, Na+, or Li+ are between 10 and 40 times faster than the corresponding influxes. This suggests that the permease functions asymmetrically. Cross-comparison between the rates of net [3H]melibiose entry during the influx reactions coupled to either cation and corresponding unidirectional sugar inflow during exchange and counterflow reactions leads to the conclusions that: 1) the step involving release of the co-substrates from the permease on the inner surface of the membrane is sequenced (sugar first and then coupled cation); 2) this step is rate determining for cycling of the permease. The Na+-melibiose passive flux data indicate in particular that release of Na+ ions rather than release of sugar into the intravesicular space is the slowest step during permease cycling. This property would hamper net passive Na+-melibiose influx but should allow exchange of sugar without concomitant exchange of the coupled cation. Finally, evidence is provided suggesting that the relative rates of release of the two co-substrates from the permease on the inner membrane surface varied considerably in relation to the identity of the coupled cation.  相似文献   

15.
A study has been made of the sugar substrate specificities and the cation specificities of the melibiose transport system of Escherichia coli. The following beta-galactosides were found to be transported: lactose, L-arabinose-beta-D-galactoside, D-fructose-beta-D-galactoside, o- and p-nitrophenyl-beta-D-galactosides. These beta-galactosides were cotransported with Na+ but not with H+. The alpha-galactosides raffinose, melibiose and p-nitrophenyl-alpha-galactoside were transported with either H+ or Na+. Of the monosaccharides tested D-galactose could use either Na+ or H+ for cotransport whereas D-fucose, L-arabinose and D-galactosamine could use only Na+. The sugar specificity requirements for H+ cotransport are therefore more exacting than those for Na+ cotransport.  相似文献   

16.
Enzyme IIA(Glc), encoded by the crr gene of the phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase system, plays an important role in regulating intermediary metabolism in Escherichia coli ("catabolite repression"). One function involves inhibition of inducible transport systems ("inducer exclusion"), and with lactose permease, a galactoside is required for unphosphorylated IIA(Glc) binding to cytoplasmic loops IV/V and VI/VII [Sondej, M., Sun, J. et al. (1999) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 96, 3525-3530]. With inside-out membrane vesicles containing the permease, [(125)I]IIA(Glc) binding promoted by melibiose exhibits an affinity (K(D)(IIA)) of approximately 1 microM and a stoichiometry of one mole of IIA(Glc) per six moles of lactose permease. Both the quantity of [(125)I]IIA(Glc) bound and the sugar concentration required for half-maximal IIA(Glc) binding (K(0.5)(IIA)(sug)) was measured for eight permease substrates. Differences in maximal IIA(Glc) binding are observed, and the K(0.5)(IIA)(sug) does not correlate with the affinity of LacY for sugar. Furthermore, K(0.5)(IIA)(sug) does not correlate with sugar affinities for various permease mutants. IIA(Glc) does not bind to a mutant (Cys154 --> Gly), which is locked in an outwardly facing conformation, binds with increased stoichiometry to mutant Lys131 --> Cys, and binds only weakly to two other mutants which appear to be predominantly in either an outwardly or an inwardly facing conformation. When the latter two mutations are combined, sugar-dependent IIA(Glc) binding returns to near wild-type levels. The findings suggest that binding of various substrates to lactose permease results in a collection of unique conformations, each of which presents a specific surface toward the inner face of the membrane that can interact to varying degrees with IIA(Glc).  相似文献   

17.
A. M. Dean 《Genetics》1989,123(3):441-454
The kinetics of the permeases and beta-galactosidases of six lactose operons which had been transduced into a common genetic background from natural isolates of Escherichia coli were investigated. The fitnesses conferred by the operons were determined using chemostat competition experiments in which lactose was the sole growth-limiting factor. The cell wall is demonstrated to impose a resistance to the diffusion of galactosides at low substrate concentrations. A steady state model of the flux of lactose through the metabolic pathway (diffusion, uptake and hydrolysis) is shown to be proportional to fitness. This metabolic model is used to explain why an approximately twofold range in activity among the permease alleles confers a 13% range in fitness, whereas a similar range in activity among alleles of the beta-galactosidase confers a 0.5% range in fitness. This metabolic model implies that selection need not be maximized when a resource is scarce.  相似文献   

18.
Previous studies utilizing site-directed mutagenesis [Pourcher et al. (1990) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 87, 468-472] indicate that out of seven histidinyl residues in the melibiose (mel) permease of Escherichia coli, only His94 is important. The role of His94 has now been investigated by replacing the residue with Asn, Gln, or Arg. Cells expressing mel permease with Asn94 or Gln94 retain 30% or 20% of wild-type activity, respectively, and surprisingly, immunological assays demonstrate that diminished transport activity is due to a proportional reduction in the amount of permease in the membrane. Moreover, kinetic analyses of transport and ligand binding studies with right-side-out membrane vesicles indicate that both substrate recognition and turnover (kcat) are comparable in the mutant permeases and the wild-type. Mel permease with Arg in place of His94 also binds ligand and catalyzes sugar accumulation, but only when the cells are grown at 30 degrees C, and evidence is presented that Arg94 permease is inactivated at 37 degrees C. Finally, labeling studies demonstrate that expression and/or insertion of the permease, but not degradation, is strongly dependent on the amino acid present at position 94 and temperature. The findings indicate that an imidazole group at position 94 is required for proper insertion and stability of mel permease, but not for transport activity per se. Since replacement of the other six histidinyl residues in mel permease with Arg has little or no effect on transport activity, it is concluded that histidinyl residues do not play a direct role in the mechanism of this secondary transport protein.  相似文献   

19.
Within the lactose permease, an arginine residue is found on a transmembrane segment at position 302. Based upon the effects of mutations at or in the vicinity of Arg-302, this residue has been implicated to be involved with H+ and/or sugar recognition. To further elucidate the role of this residue, we have substituted Arg-302 with serine, histidine, and leucine via site-directed mutagenesis. All three of these substitutions result in an impaired ability to transport galactosides as evidenced by their poor growth on minimal plates supplemented with lactose or melibiose. Furthermore, in vitro transport assays revealed substantial alterations in the kinetic constants for downhill lactose transport. The wild-type strain exhibited a Km for lactose transport of 0.30 mM and a Vmax of 267 nmol of lactose/min.mg of protein. The Ser-302, His-302, and Leu-302 were observed to have Km values of 0.18, 2.3, and 2.8 mM, and Vmax values of 11.6, 56.4, and 22.0 nmol of lactose/min.mg of protein, respectively. In uphill transport assays, all three mutants were unable to accumulate beta-methyl-D-thiogalactoside. However, both the Ser-302 and His-302 mutants were able to accumulate lactose against a concentration gradient. During H+ transport assays, all three mutants were shown to transport H+ in conjunction with thiodigalactoside. In addition, the Ser-302 and His-302 strains exhibited small alkalinizations upon the addition of lactose. However, for the Leu-302 mutant, the addition of lactose did not result in a significant level of H+ transport. Finally, experiments were conducted which were aimed at measuring the ability of the mutant permeases to catalyze an H+ leak. In this regard, a comparison was made between the wild-type and mutant strains concerning their steady state pH gradient and their rates of H+ influx following oxygen pulses. The results of these experiments suggest that mutations at position 302 cause a sugar-dependent H+ leak.  相似文献   

20.
The sugar specificity mutants of the lactose permease containing Val177 or Val177/Asn319 were analyzed with regard to their ability to couple H+ and sugar co-transport. Both mutants were able to transport lactose downhill to a significant degree. The Val177 mutant was partially defective in the active accumulation of galactosides, whereas the Val177/Asn319 mutant was completely defective in the uphill accumulation of sugars. With regard to coupling, the Val177 mutant was shown to catalyze the uncoupled transport of H+ to a substantial degree. This led to a decrease in the H+ electrochemical gradient under aerobic conditions and also resulted in faster H+ uptake when a transient H+ electrochemical gradient was generated under anaerobic conditions. Interestingly, galactosides were shown to diminish the rate of uncoupled H+ transport in the Val177 strain. The Val177/Asn319 strain also catalyzed uncoupled H+ transport, but to a lesser degree than the single Val177 mutant. In addition, the Val177/Asn319 mutant was shown to transport galactosides with or without H+. The observed H+/lactose stoichiometry was 0.30 in the double mutant compared to 0.98 in the wild-type strain. When an H+ electrochemical gradient was generated across the membrane, the Val177/Asn319 mutant permease was shown to facilitate an extremely rapid net H+ leak if nonmetabolizable galactosides had been equilibrated across the membrane. The mechanism of this leak is consistent with a circular pathway involving H+/galactoside influx and uncoupled galactoside efflux. The magnitude of the H+ leak in the presence of nonmetabolizable galactosides was so great in the double mutant that low concentrations of certain galactosides (i.e. 0.5 mM thiodigalactoside) resulted in a complete inhibition of growth. These results are discussed with regard to the possibility that cation and sugar binding to the lactose permease may involve a direct physical coupling at a common recognition site.  相似文献   

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