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1.
The maltose ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter of Salmonella typhimurium is composed of a membrane-associated complex (MalFGK2) and a periplasmic substrate binding protein. To further elucidate protein-protein interactions between the subunits, we have studied the dissociation and reassembly of the MalFGK2 complex at the level of purified components in proteoliposomes. First, we optimized the yield in purified complex protein by taking advantage of a newly constructed expression plasmid that carries the malK, malF and malG genes in tandem orientation. Incorporated in proteoliposomes, the complex exhibited maltose binding protein/maltose-dependent ATPase activity with a Vmax of 1.25 μmol Pi/min/mg and a Km of 0.1 mM. ATPase activity was sensitive to vanadate and enzyme IIAGlc, a component of the enterobacterial glucose transport system. The proteoliposomes displayed maltose transport activity with an initial rate of 61 nmol/min/mg. Treatment of proteoliposomes with 6.6 M urea resulted in the release of medium-exposed MalK subunits concomitant with the complete loss of ATPase activity. By adding increasing amounts of purified MalK to urea-treated proteoliposomes, about 50% of vanadate-sensitive ATPase activity relative to the control could be recovered. Furthermore, the phenotype of MalKQ140K that exhibits ATPase activity in solution but not when associated with MalFG was confirmed by reassembly with MalK-depleted proteoliposomes.  相似文献   

2.
The thermoacidophilic gram-positive bacterium Alicyclobacillus acidocaldarius grows at 60 degrees C and pH 2-3. The organism can utilize maltose and maltodextrins as energy source that are taken up by an ATP-binding cassette (ABC) import system. Genes encoding a maltose binding protein, MalE, and two membrane-integral subunits, MalF and MalG, are clustered on the chromosome but a malK gene translating into a cognate ATPase subunit is lacking. Here we report the cloning of malK from genomic DNA by using the msiK gene of Streptomyces lividans as a probe. Purified MalK exhibited a spontaneous ATPase activity with a Vmax of 0.13 micromol Pi/min/mg and a Km of 330 microM that was optimal at the growth temperature of the organism. Coexpression of malK, malF and malG in Escherichia coli resulted in the formation of a complex that could be coeluted from an affinity matrix after solubilization of membranes with dodecylmaltoside. Proteoliposomes prepared from the MalFGK complex and preformed phospholipid vesicles of A. acidocaldarius displayed a low intrinsic ATPase activity that was stimulated sevenfold by maltose-loaded MalE, thereby indicating coupling of ATP hydrolysis to substrate translocation. These results provide evidence for MalK being the physiological ATPase subunit of the A. acidocaldarius maltose transporter. Moreover, to our knowledge, this is the first report on the functional reconstitution of an ABC transport system from a thermophilic microorganism.  相似文献   

3.
ATP-binding-cassette (ABC) subunit MalK of the binding protein-dependent transport system for maltose of Salmonella typhimurium and Escherichia coli is crucial to the transport process but also exhibits a repressing activity on other genes of the maltose regulon. The latter function has been attributed to a carboxy-terminal extension by which MalK differs in length from a prototype ABC protein. In order to define the boundaries of putative functional domains of MalK, we have analyzed pairs of N- and C-terminally truncated MalK proteins of S. typhimurium. Coexpressed half molecules of about equal lengths (MalKN1: residues 1 to 179; MalKC1: residues 179 to 369) restored the transport activity of a malK strain and displayed substantial regulatory activity. The same regulatory activity was obtained when malKC1 was expressed separately. These results indicate that a covalent linkage is not absolutely essential for function and that the protein might be composed of two structurally distinct entities. To elucidate further the minimal structural requirements for the regulatory function of MalK, we have studied chimeric proteins that have C-terminal portions of MalK fused to the corresponding amino-terminal fragments of its close homolog LacK. Functional analyses revealed that a fusion containing only the C-terminal extension of MalK (Q263 to V369) is sufficient to display half-maximal regulatory activity. This activity increased with the lengths of the MalK portions present in the chimeras. Furthermore, the failure of two chimeras to support maltose transport suggests a structurally critical region between residues 243 and 264. In the absence of a crystal structure, this work contributes to the understanding of the multiple functions of MalK.  相似文献   

4.
Catabolite repression is a mechanism that enables bacteria to control carbon utilization. As part of this global regulatory network, components of the phosphoenolpyruvate:carbohydrate phosphotransferase system inhibit the uptake of less favorable sugars when a preferred carbon source such as glucose is available. This process is termed inducer exclusion. In bacteria belonging to the phylum Firmicutes, HPr, phosphorylated at serine 46 (P‐Ser46‐HPr) is the key player but its mode of action is elusive. To address this question at the level of purified protein components, we have chosen a homolog of the Escherichia coli maltose/maltodextrin ATP‐binding cassette transporter from Lactobacillus casei (MalE1‐MalF1G1K12) as a model system. We show that the solute binding protein, MalE1, binds linear and cyclic maltodextrins but not maltose. Crystal structures of MalE1 complexed with these sugars provide a clue why maltose is not a substrate. P‐Ser46‐HPr inhibited MalE1/maltotetraose‐stimulated ATPase activity of the transporter incorporated in proteoliposomes. Furthermore, cross‐linking experiments revealed that P‐Ser46‐HPr contacts the nucleotide‐binding subunit, MalK1, in proximity to the Walker A motif. However, P‐Ser46‐HPr did not block binding of ATP to MalK1. Together, our findings provide first biochemical evidence that P‐Ser‐HPr arrests the transport cycle by preventing ATP hydrolysis at the MalK1 subunits of the transporter.  相似文献   

5.
GacH is the solute binding protein (receptor) of the putative oligosaccharide ATP-binding cassette transporter GacFG, encoded in the acarbose biosynthetic gene cluster (gac) from Streptomyces glaucescens GLA.O. In the context of the proposed function of acarbose (acarviosyl-1,4-maltose) as a ‘carbophor,’ the transporter, in complex with a yet to be identified ATPase subunit, is supposed to mediate the uptake of longer acarbose homologs and acarbose for recycling purposes. Binding assays using isothermal titration calorimetry identified GacH as a maltose/maltodextrin-binding protein with a low affinity for acarbose but with considerable binding activity for its homolog, component 5C (acarviosyl-1,4-maltose-1,4-glucose-1,1-glucose). In contrast, the maltose-binding protein of Salmonella typhimurium (MalE) displays high-affinity acarbose binding. We determined the crystal structures of GacH in complex with acarbose, component 5C, and maltotetraose, as well as in unliganded form. As found for other solute receptors, the polypeptide chain of GacH is folded into two distinct domains (lobes) connected by a hinge, with the interface between the lobes forming the substrate-binding pocket. GacH does not specifically bind the acarviosyl group, but displays specificity for binding of the maltose moiety in the inner part of its binding pocket. The crystal structure of acarbose-loaded MalE showed that two glucose units of acarbose are bound at the same region and position as maltose. A comparative analysis revealed that in GacH, acarbose is buried deeper into the binding pocket than in MalE by exactly one glucose ring shift, resulting in a total of 18 hydrogen-bond interactions versus 21 hydrogen-bond interactions for MalEacarbose. Since the substrate specificity of ATP-binding cassette import systems is determined by the cognate binding protein, our results provide the first biochemical and structural evidence for the proposed role of GacHFG in acarbose metabolism.  相似文献   

6.
The maltose transport system of Escherichia coli, a member of the ABC transport superfamily of proteins, consists of a periplasmic maltose binding protein and a membrane-associated translocation complex that contains two copies of the ATP-binding protein MalK. To examine the need for two nucleotide-binding domains in this transport complex, one of the two MalK subunits was inactivated by site-directed mutagenesis. Complexes with mutations in a single subunit were obtained by attaching a polyhistidine tag to the mutagenized version of MalK and by coexpressing both wild-type MalK and mutant (His)6MalK in the same cell. Hybrid complexes containing one mutant (His)6MalK subunit and one wild-type MalK subunit were separated from those containing two mutant (His)6MalK proteins based on differential affinities for a metal chelate column. Purified transport complexes were reconstituted into proteoliposome vesicles and assayed for maltose transport and ATPase activities. When a conserved lysine residue at position 42 that is involved in ATP binding was replaced with asparagine in both MalK subunits, maltose transport and ATPase activities were reduced to 1% of those of the wild type. When the mutation was present in only one of the two subunits, the complex had 6% of the wild-type activities. Replacement of a conserved histidine residue at position 192 in MalK with arginine generated similar results. It is clear from these results that two functional MalK proteins are required for transport activity and that the two nucleotide-binding domains do not function independently to catalyze transport.  相似文献   

7.
ABC transporters are ubiquitous membrane proteins that translocate solutes across biological membranes at the expense of ATP. In prokaryotic ABC importers, the extracytoplasmic anchoring of the substrate-binding protein (receptor) is emerging as a key determinant for the structural rearrangements in the cytoplasmically exposed ATP-binding cassette domains and in the transmembrane gates during the nucleotide cycle. Here the molecular mechanism of such signaling events was addressed by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy of spin-labeled ATP-binding cassette maltose transporter variants (MalFGK2-E). A series of doubly spin-labeled mutants in the MalF-P2 domain involving positions 92, 205, 239, 252, and 273 and one triple mutant labeled at positions 205/252 in P2 and 83 in the Q-loop of MalK were assayed. The EPR data revealed that the substrate-binding protein MalE is bound to the transporter throughout the transport cycle. Concomitantly with the three conformations of the ATP-binding cassette MalK2, three functionally relevant conformations are found also in the periplasmic MalF-P2 loop, strictly dependent on cytoplasmic nucleotide binding and periplasmic docking of liganded MalE to MalFG. The reciprocal communication across the membrane unveiled here gives first insights into the stimulatory effect of MalE on the ATPase activity, and it is suggested to be an important mechanistic feature of receptor-coupled ABC transporters.  相似文献   

8.
We have investigated conformational changes of the purified maltose ATP-binding cassette transporter (MalFGK(2)) upon binding of ATP. The transport complex is composed of a heterodimer of the hydrophobic subunits MalF and MalG constituting the translocation pore and of a homodimer of MalK, representing the ATP-hydrolyzing subunit. Substrate is delivered to the transporter in complex with periplasmic maltose-binding protein (MalE). Cross-linking experiments with a variant containing an A85C mutation within the Q-loop of each MalK monomer indicated an ATP-induced shortening of the distance between both monomers. Cross-linking caused a substantial inhibition of MalE-maltose-stimulated ATPase activity. We further demonstrated that a mutation affecting the "catalytic carboxylate" (E159Q) locks the MalK dimer in the closed state, whereas a transporter containing the "ABC signature" mutation Q140K permanently resides in the resting state. Cross-linking experiments with variants containing the A85C mutation combined with cysteine substitutions in the conserved EAA motifs of MalF and MalG, respectively, revealed close proximity of these residues in the resting state. The formation of a MalK-MalG heterodimer remained unchanged upon the addition of ATP, indicating that MalG-EAA moves along with MalK during dimer closure. In contrast, the yield of MalK-MalF dimers was substantially reduced. This might be taken as further evidence for asymmetric functions of both EAA motifs. Cross-linking also caused inhibition of ATPase activity, suggesting that transporter function requires conformational changes of both EAA motifs. Together, our data support ATP-driven MalK dimer closure and reopening as crucial steps in the translocation cycle of the intact maltose transporter and are discussed with respect to a current model.  相似文献   

9.
The maltose transporter FGK2 complex of Escherichia coli was purified with the aid of a glutathione S-transferase molecular tag. In contrast to the membrane-associated form of the complex, which requires liganded maltose binding protein (MBP) for ATPase activity, the purified detergent-soluble complex exhibited a very high level of ATPase activity. This uncoupled activity was not due to dissociation of the MalK ATPase subunit from the integral membrane protein MalF and MalG subunits. The detergent-soluble ATPase activity of the complex could be further stimulated by wild-type MBP but not by a signaling-defective mutant MBP. Wild-type MBP increased the Vmax of the ATPase 2.7-fold but had no effect on the Km of the enzyme for ATP. When the detergent-soluble complex was reconstituted in proteoliposomes, it returned to being dependent on MBP for activation of ATPase, consistent with the idea that the structural changes induced in the complex by detergent that result in activation of the ATPase are reversible. The uncoupled ATPase activity resembled the membrane-bound activity of the complex also with respect to sensitivity to NaN3, as well as a mercurial, p-chloromercuribenzosulfonic acid. Verapamil, a compound that activates the ATPase activity of the multiple drug resistance P-glycoprotein, activated the maltose transporter ATPase as well. The activation of this bacterial transporter by verapamil suggests that a structural feature that is conserved among both eukaryotic and prokaryotic ATP binding cassette transporters is responsible for this activation.  相似文献   

10.
The ATP binding cassette (ABC-) transporter mediating the uptake of maltose/maltodextrins in Escherichia coli/Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium is one of the best characterized systems and serves as a model for studying the molecular mechanism by which ABC importers exert their functions. The transporter is composed of a periplasmic maltose binding protein (MalE), and a membrane-bound complex (MalFGK(2)), comprising the pore-forming hydrophobic subunits, MalF and MalG, and two copies of the ABC subunit, MalK. We report on the isolation of suppressor mutations within malFG that partially restore transport of a maltose-negative mutant carrying the malK809 allele (MalKQ140K). The mutation affects the conserved LSGGQ motif that is involved in ATP binding. Three out of four suppressor mutations map in periplasmic loops P2 and P1 respectively of MalFG. Cross-linking data revealed proximity of these regions to MalE. In particular, as demonstrated in vitro and in vivo, Gly-13 of substrate-free and substrate-loaded MalE is in close contact to Pro-78 of MalG. These data suggest that MalE is permanently in close contact to MalG-P1 via its N-terminal domain. Together, our results are interpreted in favour of the notion that substrate availability is communicated from MalE to the MalK dimer via extracytoplasmic loops of MalFG, and are discussed with respect to a current transport model.  相似文献   

11.
MalFGK2 is an ATP‐binding cassette (ABC) transporter that mediates the uptake of maltose/maltodextrins into Escherichia coli. A periplasmic maltose‐binding protein (MBP) delivers maltose to the transmembrane subunits (MalFG) and stimulates the ATPase activity of the cytoplasmic nucleotide‐binding subunits (MalK dimer). This MBP‐stimulated ATPase activity is independent of maltose for purified transporter in detergent micelles. However, when the transporter is reconstituted in membrane bilayers, only the liganded form of MBP efficiently stimulates its activity. To investigate the mechanism of maltose stimulation, electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy was used to study the interactions between the transporter and MBP in nanodiscs and in detergent. We found that full engagement of both lobes of maltose‐bound MBP unto MalFGK2 is facilitated by nucleotides and stabilizes a semi‐open MalK dimer. Maltose‐bound MBP promotes the transition to the semi‐open state of MalK when the transporter is in the membrane, whereas such regulation does not require maltose in detergent. We suggest that stabilization of the semi‐open MalK2 conformation by maltose‐bound MBP is key to the coupling of maltose transport to ATP hydrolysis in vivo, because it facilitates the progression of the MalK dimer from the open to the semi‐open conformation, from which it can proceed to hydrolyze ATP.  相似文献   

12.
ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters have evolved an ATP-dependent alternating-access mechanism to transport substrates across membranes. Despite important progress, especially in their structural analysis, it is still unknown how the substrate stimulates ATP hydrolysis, the hallmark of ABC transporters. In this study, we measure the ATP turnover cycle of MalFGK2 in steady and pre-steady state conditions. We show that (i) the basal ATPase activity of MalFGK2 is very low because the cleavage of ATP is rate-limiting, (ii) the binding of open-state MalE to the transporter induces ATP cleavage but leaves release of Pi limiting, and (iii) the additional presence of maltose stimulates release of Pi, and therefore increases the overall ATP turnover cycle. We conclude that open-state MalE stabilizes MalFGK2 in the outward-facing conformation until maltose triggers return to the inward-facing state for substrate and Pi release. This concerted action explains why ATPase activity of MalFGK2 depends on maltose, and why MalE is essential for transport.  相似文献   

13.
14.
The maltose/maltodextrin transport system of Escherichia coli/Salmonella, composed of periplasmic maltose‐binding protein, MalE, the pore‐forming subunits MalF and MalG, and a homodimer of the nucleotide‐binding subunit, MalK, serves as a model for canonical ATP‐binding cassette importers in general. The wealth of knowledge accumulated on the maltose transporter in more than three decades by genetic, molecular genetic and biochemical means was complemented more recently by crystal structures of the isolated MalK dimer and of two conformational states of the full transporter. Here, we summarize insights into the transport mechanism provided by these structures and draw the reader's attention to experimental tools by which the dynamics of the transporter can be studied during substrate translocation. A transport model is presented that integrates currently available biochemical, biophysical and structural data. We also present the state of knowledge on regulatory functions of the maltose transporter associated with the C‐terminal domain of MalK. Finally, we will address the application of coarse‐grained modelling to visualize the progression of the conformational changes of an ABC transporter with special emphasis on the maltose system, which can provide a model platform for testing and validating the bioinformatic tools.  相似文献   

15.
Protein synthesis occurs in macromolecular particles called ribosomes. All ribosomes are composed of RNA and proteins. While the protein composition of bacterial and eukaryotic ribosomes has been well-characterized, a systematic analysis of archaeal ribosomes has been lacking. Here we report the first comprehensive two-dimensional PAGE and mass spectrometry analysis of archaeal ribosomes isolated from the thermophilic Pyrobaculum aerophilum and the thermoacidophilic Sulfolobus acidocaldarius Crenarchaeota. Our analysis identified all 66 ribosomal proteins (r-proteins) of the P. aerophilum small and large subunits, as well as all but two (62 of 64; 97%) r-proteins of the S. acidocaldarius small and large subunits that are predicted genomically. Some r-proteins were identified with one or two lysine methylations and N-terminal acetylations. In addition, we identify three hypothetical proteins that appear to be bona fide r-proteins of the S. acidocaldarius large subunit. Dissociation of r-proteins from the S. acidocaldarius large subunit indicates that the novel r-proteins establish tighter interactions with the large subunit than some integral r-proteins. Furthermore, cryo electron microscopy reconstructions of the S. acidocaldarius and P. aerophilum 50S subunits allow for a tentative localization of the binding site of the novel r-proteins. This study illustrates not only the potential diversity of the archaeal ribosomes but also the necessity to experimentally analyze the archaeal ribosomes to ascertain their protein composition. The discovery of novel archaeal r-proteins and factors may be the first step to understanding how archaeal ribosomes cope with extreme environmental conditions.  相似文献   

16.
We have investigated the interaction of the uncommonly large periplasmic P2 loop of the MalF subunit of the maltose ATP-binding cassette transporter (MalFGK2) from Escherichia coli and Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium with maltose binding protein (MalE) by site-specific chemical cross-linking in the assembled transport complex. We focused on possible distance changes between two pairs of residues of the P2 loop and MalE during the transport cycle. The distance between MalF(S205C) and MalE(T80C) (∼5 Å) remained unchanged under all conditions tested. Cross-linking did not affect the ATPase activity of the complex. The distance between MalF(T177C) and MalE(T31C) changed from ∼10 Å to ∼5 Å upon binding of ATP (or maltose, with a less pronounced result) and was reset to ∼10 Å after hydrolysis of one ATP. A cross-link (∼25 Å) between MalF(S205C) and MalE(T31C) was observed only when the transporter resided in a transition state-like conformation, as was the case after vanadate trapping or in a binding protein-independent mutant, both of which are characterized by tight binding of unliganded MalE to the transporter. Thus, we propose that the observed cross-link is indicative of catalytic intermediates of the transporter. Together, our results strengthen the notion that the MalF P2 loop plays an important role in intersubunit communication. In particular, this loop is involved in keeping MalE in close contact with the transporter. The data are discussed with respect to a crystal structure and current transport models.ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters utilize the free energy of ATP hydrolysis to translocate substrates across biological membranes and can function as import or export systems (17). ABC transporters are generally composed of two hydrophobic, pore-forming transmembrane subunits and transmembrane domains (TMDs) and two hydrophilic nucleotide-binding (or ABC) subunits and nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs) that hydrolyze ATP (9). The crystal structures of isolated NBDs (6, 23, 34, 43) revealed that NBDs can be divided into a RecA-like subdomain comprising both the Walker A and the Walker B motifs, which are involved in nucleotide binding, and a helical subdomain harboring the unique LSGGQ motif (35). Furthermore, in the physiologically relevant NBD dimer, the nucleotide is complexed between the Walker A and B sites of one monomer and the LSGGQ motif of the opposing monomer. Both subdomains are joined by the “Q loop” containing a conserved glutamine residue that binds to the Mg2+ ion and attacking water and is likely to be involved in communicating ATP binding to the TMDs (10, 20, 29). ATP-dependent closing of the NBD dimer is thought to provide one possibility of the power stroke of ABC transporters (38).ABC importers that are confined to prokaryotes mediate the uptake of a large variety of solutes, including inorganic ions, amino acids, sugars, vitamins, oligopeptides, and polyamines (5). They require an additional protein, the extracytoplasmic solute binding protein (SBP), in order to capture the substrate and to deliver it to the cognate ABC transporter (37). SBPs typically consist of two lobes that are connected by a linker region. The interface between the two lobes forms the substrate binding site. Upon binding of the ligand, the proteins undergo a conformational change from an open toward a closed state (33) which, by interaction with extracytoplasmic peptide regions of TMDs of the cognate ABC transporter, initiates the transport process (31). The molecular events by which binding of ATP to the NBDs and interaction of liganded binding proteins with the TMDs are communicated to eventually trigger substrate translocation are still poorly understood.The maltose ABC transporter of Escherichia coli and Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium is one of the best-characterized transporters and thus serves as a model system for studying the mechanism by which ABC transporters exert their functions in general (15). The transporter is composed of the extracytoplasmic (periplasmic) maltose binding protein (MalE), the membrane-spanning subunits MalF and MalG, and two copies of the ATP-hydrolyzing subunit (MalK) (Fig. (Fig.1A1A).Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.(A) Structure of the catalytic intermediate of the maltose transporter [MalFGK(E159Q)2-E]. The complex is shown in a ribbon diagram. White horizontal bars mark the boundaries of the membrane. Color code: yellow, MalE; cyan, MalF; red, MalG; green and magenta, MalK dimer. (B) Close-up view of the contact site between MalF P2 and the N-terminal lobe of MalE. The color code is the same as that for panel A. Residues from regions I and II that were replaced by cysteines are indicated in pink (MalF) and green (MalE). Residue MalE-K179, which was used as a control, is shown in green. The figure was drawn with DS ViewerPro 6.0 (Accelrys, Cambridge, United Kingdom), using the coordinates from entry 2R6G in the Brookhaven Protein Data Bank.Recently, suppressor mutational analysis provided a first hint that substrate availability is communicated from MalE to the MalK dimer via periplasmic loop regions of MalFG (11). Moreover, by site-directed cross-linking based on previous genetic evidence (19, 40), we demonstrated a close proximity of MalE G13 to Pro-78 in the first periplasmic loop (P1) of MalG, independently of cofactors such as maltose or ATP. Interaction of both residues was also observed in intact cells (11). These findings led us to propose that a copy of MalE is permanently associated with the transporter throughout the catalytic cycle. Furthermore, we have found that a region of the large, periplasmic P2 loop of MalF around Ser-205 (Fig. (Fig.1)1) is in cross-linking distance from MalE in the presence of maltose and MgATP only or when the transporter resides in the vanadate-trapped transition state. These results were perfectly confirmed by the subsequently published crystal structure of the MalFGK(E159Q)2-E complex, which represents a transport intermediate (32). Here, the MalK dimer is complexed with two ATP molecules, and MalE is tightly associated with MalFG, but maltose has already been released into a binding pocket formed by MalF only. In particular, the N-terminal lobe of MalE is in close contact with the P2 loop of MalF (Fig. (Fig.1A1A).In this communication, we have taken advantage of this structural information to gain further insight into the MalF P2-MalE interaction during the transport cycle. We demonstrate ATP- and maltose-dependent distance changes between selected pairs of residues of the loop and MalE in the assembled complex by site-specific cross-linking. Our data demonstrate for the first time that the MalF P2 loop is in close contact to MalE throughout the catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

17.
The binding protein-dependent maltose transport system of enterobacteria (MalFGK(2)), a member of the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter superfamily, is composed of two integral membrane proteins, MalF and MalG, and of two copies of an ATPase subunit, MalK, which hydrolyze ATP, thus energizing the translocation process. In addition, an extracellular (periplasmic) substrate-binding protein (MalE) is required for activity. Ligand translocation and ATP hydrolysis are dependent on a signaling mechanism originating from the binding protein and traveling through MalF/MalG. Thus, subunit-subunit interactions in the complex are crucial to the transport process but the chemical nature of residues involved is poorly understood. We have investigated the proximity of residues in a conserved sequence ("EAA" loop) of MalF and MalG to residues in a helical segment of the MalK subunits by means of site-directed chemical cross-linking. To this end, single cysteine residues were introduced into each subunit at several positions and the respective malF and malG alleles were individually co-expressed with each of the malK alleles. Membrane vesicles were prepared from those double mutants that contained a functional transporter in vivo and treated with Cu(1,10-phenanthroline)(2)SO(4) or bifunctional cross-linkers. The results suggest that residues Ala-85, Lys-106, Val-114, and Val-117 in the helical segment of MalK, to different extents, participate in constitution of asymmetric interaction sites with the EAA loops of MalF and MalG. Furthermore, both MalK monomers in the complex are in close contact to each other through Ala-85 and Lys-106. These interactions are strongly modulated by MgATP, indicating a structural rearrangement of the subunits during the transport cycle. These data are discussed with respect to current transport models.  相似文献   

18.
19.
The thermostable arginine ABC transporter of Geobacillus stearothermophilus consists of a solute binding protein, ArtJ; a transmembrane subunit, ArtM; and a nucleotide-binding subunit, ArtP. An ArtM/His6-ArtP complex was functionally assembled from separately purified subunits as demonstrated by assaying stimulation of its ATPase activity by arginine-loaded ArtJ in proteoliposomes. Studying in vitro assembly with variants carrying mutations in the conserved Q loop and/or the EAA loop of ArtP and ArtM, respectively, confirmed the predicted roles of both motifs in intersubunit signaling and physical interaction, respectively. In vitro assembly is considered a useful tool for investigating assembly defects of ABC transporters caused by mutations.  相似文献   

20.
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