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1.
The purification and functional reconstitution of a five-component oligopeptide ATP-binding cassette transporter with a remarkably wide substrate specificity are described. High-affinity peptide uptake was dependent on liganded substrate-binding protein OppA, which interacts with the translocator OppBCDF with higher affinity than unliganded OppA. Transport screening with combinatorial peptide libraries revealed that (i) the Opp transporter is not selective with respect to amino acid side chains of the transported peptides; (ii) any peptide that can bind to OppA is transported via Opp, including very long peptides up to 35 residues long; and (iii) the binding specificity of OppA largely determines the overall transport selectivity.  相似文献   

2.
The oligopeptide transporter Opp is a five-component ABC uptake system. The extracytoplasmic lipid-anchored substrate-binding protein (or receptor) OppA delivers peptides to an integral membrane complex OppBCDF (or translocator), where, on ATP binding and hydrolysis, translocation across the membrane takes place. OppA and OppBCDF were labeled with fluorescent probes, reconstituted into giant unilamellar vesicles, and the receptor-translocator interactions were investigated by fluorescence correlation spectroscopy. Lateral mobility of OppA was reduced on incorporation of OppBCDF into giant unilamellar vesicles, and decreased even further on the addition of peptide. Fluorescence cross-correlation measurements revealed that OppBCDF distinguished liganded from unliganded OppA, binding only the former. Addition of ATP or its nonhydrolyzable analog AMP-PNP resulted in release of OppA from OppBCDF. In vanadate-trapped “transition state” conditions, OppA also was not bound by OppBCDF. A model is presented in which ATP-binding to OppDF results in donation of peptide to OppBC and simultaneous release of OppA. ATP-hydrolysis would complete the peptide translocation and reset the transporter for another catalytic cycle. Implications in terms of a general transport mechanism for ABC importers and exporters are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The Escherichia coli peptide binding protein OppA is an essential component of the oligopeptide transporter Opp. Based on studies on its orthologue from Salmonella typhimurium, it has been proposed that OppA binds peptides between two and five amino acids long, with no apparent sequence selectivity. Here, we studied peptide binding to E. coli OppA directly and show that the protein has an unexpected preference for basic peptides. OppA was expressed in the periplasm, where it bound to available peptides. The protein was purified in complex with tightly bound peptides. The crystal structure (up to 2.0 Å) of OppA liganded with the peptides indicated that the protein has a preference for peptides containing a lysine. Mass spectrometry analysis of the bound peptides showed that peptides between two and five amino acids long bind to the protein and indeed hinted at a preference for positively charged peptides. The preference of OppA for peptides with basic residues, in particular lysines, was corroborated by binding studies with peptides of defined sequence using isothermal titration calorimetry and intrinsic protein fluorescence titration. The protein bound tripeptides and tetrapeptides containing positively charged residues with high affinity, whereas related peptides without lysines/arginines were bound with low affinity. A structure of OppA in an open conformation in the absence of ligands was also determined to 2.0 Å, revealing that the initial binding site displays a negative surface charge, consistent with the observed preference for positively charged peptides. Taken together, E. coli OppA appears to have a preference for basic peptides.  相似文献   

4.
Studies of the protein function of Borrelia burgdorferi have been limited by a lack of tools for manipulating borrelial DNA. We devised a system to study the function of a B. burgdorferi oligopeptide permease (Opp) orthologue by complementation with Escherichia coli Opp proteins. The Opp system of E. coli has been extensively studied and has well defined substrate specificities. The system is of interest in B. burgdorferi because analysis of its genome has revealed little identifiable machinery for synthesis or transport of amino acids and only a single intact peptide transporter operon. As such, peptide uptake may play a major role in nutrition for the organism. Substrate specificity for ABC peptide transporters in other organisms is determined by their substrate binding protein. The B. burgdorferi Opp operon differs from the E. coli Opp operon in that it has three separate substrate binding proteins, OppA-1, -2 and -3. In addition, B. burgdorferi has two OppA orthologues, OppA-4 and -5, encoded on separate plasmids. The substrate binding proteins interact with integral membrane proteins, OppB and OppC, to transport peptides into the cell. The process is driven by two ATP binding proteins, OppD and OppF. Using opp-deleted E. coli mutants, we transformed cells with B. burgdorferi oppA-1, -2, -4 or -5 and E. coli oppBCDF. All of the B. burgdorferi OppA proteins are able to complement E. coli OppBCDF to form a functional Opp transport system capable of transporting peptides for nutritional use. Although there is overlap in substrate specificities, the substrate specificities for B. burgdorferi OppAs are not identical to that of E. coli OppA. Transport of toxic peptides by B. burgdorferi grown in nutrient-rich medium parallels borrelial OppA substrate specificity in the complementation system. Use of this complementation system will pave the way for more detailed studies of B. burgdorferi peptide transport than currently available tools for manipulating borrelial DNA will allow.  相似文献   

5.
Mass spectrometry (MS) was used to characterise the binding of the 58 kDa protein OppA to 11 peptides with diverse properties. Peptides with two, three and five amino acid residues were added to OppA, and the mass spectra showed that the highest-affinity complexes are formed between OppA and tripeptide ligands. Lower-affinity complexes were observed for OppA and dipeptide ligands, and no complex formation was detected with pentapeptides or a tripeptide in which the N-terminal amino group was acetylated. Tripeptides containing a single d amino acid residue were found not to bind to native OppA. Evidence from the peak width and the, charge in the spectra of the complexes suggests that the bound peptides are encapsulated by the protein in a solvent-filled cavity in the gas phase of the mass spectrometer. Analysis of the proportions of peptide-bound and free proteins under low-energy MS conditions shows a good correlation with solution-phase K(d) measurements where available. Increasing the internal energy of the gas-phase complex led to dissociation of the complex. The ease of dissociation is interpreted in terms of the intrinsic stability of the complex in the absence of the stabilising effects of bulk solvent. The results from this study demonstrate insensitivity to the hydrophobic and ionic properties, of the side-chains of the peptides, in contrast to the investigation of other protein ligand systems by MS. Moreover, these findings are in accord with the physiological role of this protein in allowing into the cell di- and tripeptides containing naturally occurring amino acids, regardless of their sequence, while barring access to potentially harmful peptide mimics.  相似文献   

6.
Mutants of a diaminopimelic acid (Dap)-requiring strain of Escherichia coli were isolated which failed to grow on media in which Dap was replaced by the cell wall murein tripeptide, l-alanyl-γ-d-glutamyl-meso-diaminopimelate. In one such mutant, which is oligopeptide permease (Opp) positive, we have identified a new gene product, designated MppA (murein peptide permease A), that is about 46% identical to OppA, the periplasmic binding protein for Opp. A plasmid carrying the wild-type mppA gene allows the mutant to grow on tripeptide. Two other mutants that failed to grow on tripeptide were resistant to triornithine toxicity, indicating a defect in the opp operon. An E. coli strain whose entire opp operon was deleted but which carried the mppA locus was unable to grow on murein tripeptide unless it was provided with oppBCDF genes in trans. Our data suggest a model whereby the periplasmic MppA binds the murein tripeptide, which is then transported into the cytoplasm via membrane-bound and cytoplasmic OppBCDF. In assessing the affinity of MppA for non-cell wall peptides, we have found that proline auxotrophy can be satisfied with the peptide Pro-Phe-Lys, which utilizes either MppA or OppA in conjunction with OppBCDF for its uptake. Thus, MppA, OppA, and perhaps the third OppA paralog revealed by the E. coli genome sequence may each bind a particular family of peptides but interact with common membrane-associated components for transport of their bound ligands into the cell. As to the physiological function of MppA, the possibility that it may be involved in signal transduction pathway(s) is discussed.During growth, Escherichia coli breaks down over one-third of its cell wall each generation and efficiently reutilizes the tripeptide therefrom for synthesis of new murein in a sequence of events termed the recycling pathway (9, 11, 32; see reference 33 for a review). In this pathway, murein is degraded to N-acetylglucosaminyl-1,6-anhydro-N-acetylmuramyl-l-alanyl- γ-d-glutamyl-meso-diaminopimelate (GlcNAc-anhMurNAc-tripeptide) by the combined action of lytic transglycosylases, endopeptidases, and d,d- and l,d-carboxypeptidases which are present in the periplasm (39). The muropeptide, GlcNAc- anhMurNAc-tripeptide, presumably is transported into the cytoplasm via the membrane-bound AmpG permease (20, 24). The tripeptide is then released from the muropeptide by AmpD anhydro-N-acetylmuramyl-l-alanine amidase (19, 21). Surprisingly, almost all murein tripeptide for recycling is transported into the cell as GlcNAc-anhMurNAc-tripeptide via the AmpG permease and is then released by the cytoplasmic AmpD amidase (20, 32), rather than being transported as the free tripeptide via the oligopeptide permease (Opp) as was originally proposed (10). Direct utilization of the tripeptide for cell wall synthesis was assumed to depend on a hypothetical ligase which would attach tripeptide to UDP-MurNAc, thereby reintroducing it into the biosynthetic pathway for wall synthesis (9, 20, 33). In fact, the enzyme responsible for this activity has recently been identified, and the gene, mpl, was shown to be the open reading frame (ORF) yifG at 96 min on the E. coli map (29). An mpl null mutant was completely devoid of ligase activity, and cells of this mutant were viable and accumulated tripeptide in their cytoplasm (29).During a search for mutants lacking this murein peptide ligase activity, four mutants were isolated from a pool of mutagenized diaminopimelic acid (Dap)-negative (dap) parental cells in a screen that assayed the growth of cells on free tripeptide as a source of Dap. In this report, we describe the isolation and initial characterization of one such mutant. A new genetic locus, mppA, has been identified which codes for a periplasmic binding protein required for uptake of murein peptides. Two other mutants, one with a mutation in oppB and the other with a mutation in groESL (unpublished), were found to be defective in Opp function because of their resistance to triornithine toxicity. The oppB mutation indicates that murein tripeptide is transported from MppA into the cytoplasm via membrane components of Opp, and the groE mutation suggests that the chaperonin is involved in the proper folding and assembly of the components of the peptide transport system.  相似文献   

7.
Lactococcus lactis degrades exogenous proteins such as beta-casein to peptides of 4-30 amino acids, and uses these as nitrogen sources. The binding protein or receptor (OppA(Ll)) of the oligopeptide transport system (Opp) of L.LACTIS: has the unique capacity to bind peptides from five up to at least 20 residues. To study the binding mechanism of OppA(Ll), nonameric peptides were used in which the cysteine at position 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 or 9 was selectively labeled with either bulky and non-fluorescent or bulky and fluorescent groups. Also, nonameric peptides with a non-natural residue, azatryptophan, at positions 3 or 7 were used. The fluorescence of azatryptophan reports on the polarity of the environment. The studies indicate that the binding protein encloses the first six amino acids of the peptide, whereas the remaining residues stick out and interact with the surface of the binding protein. The peptide binding mechanism of OppA(Ll) is discussed in relation to known three-dimensional structures of members of this class of proteins, and an adaptation of the general binding mechanism is proposed.  相似文献   

8.
Studies of the protein function of Borrelia burgdorferi have been limited by a lack of tools for manipulating borrelial DNA. We devised a system to study the function of a B. burgdorferi oligopeptide permease (Opp) orthologue by complementation with Escherichia coli Opp proteins. The Opp system of E. coli has been extensively studied and has well defined substrate specificities. The system is of interest in B. burgdorferi because analysis of its genome has revealed little identifiable machinery for synthesis or transport of amino acids and only a single intact peptide transporter operon. As such, peptide uptake may play a major role in nutrition for the organism. Substrate specificity for ABC peptide transporters in other organisms is determined by their substrate binding protein. The B. burgdorferi Opp operon differs from the E. coli Opp operon in that it has three separate substrate binding proteins, OppA-1, -2 and -3. In addition, B. burgdorferi has two OppA orthologues, OppA-4 and -5, encoded on separate plasmids. The substrate binding proteins interact with integral membrane proteins, OppB and OppC, to transport peptides into the cell. The process is driven by two ATP binding proteins, OppD and OppF. Using opp-deleted E. coli mutants, we transformed cells with B. burgdorferi oppA-1, -2, -4 or -5 and E. coli oppBCDF. All of the B. burgdorferi OppA proteins are able to complement E. coli OppBCDF to form a functional Opp transport system capable of transporting peptides for nutritional use. Although there is overlap in substrate specificities, the substrate specificities for B. burgdorferi OppAs are not identical to that of E. coli OppA. Transport of toxic peptides by B. burgdorferi grown in nutrient-rich medium parallels borrelial OppA substrate specificity in the complementation system. Use of this complementation system will pave the way for more detailed studies of B. burgdorferi peptide transport than currently available tools for manipulating borrelial DNA will allow.  相似文献   

9.
Oligopeptide‐binding protein A (OppA) from Lactococcus lactis binds peptides of an exceptionally wide range of lengths (4–35 residues), with no apparent sequence preference. Here, we present the crystal structures of OppA in the open‐ and closed‐liganded conformations. The structures directly explain the protein's phenomenal promiscuity. A huge cavity allows binding of very long peptides, and a lack of constraints for the position of the N and C termini of the ligand is compatible with binding of peptides with varying lengths. Unexpectedly, the peptide's amino‐acid composition (but not the exact sequence) appears to have a function in selection, with a preference for proline‐rich peptides containing at least one isoleucine. These properties can be related to the physiology of the organism: L. lactis is auxotrophic for branched chain amino acids and favours proline‐rich caseins as a source of amino acids. We propose a new mechanism for peptide selection based on amino‐acid composition rather than sequence.  相似文献   

10.
Geminin binds to Cdt1 to ensure that DNA replication occurs only once during the cell cycle. To identify the peptide that binds to Geminin and thereby modifies the latter's ability to alter the DNA replication activity in human cancer cells, we screened a phage display library of random peptides in successive cycles of phage library panning and found one peptide sequence that bound to the 31-111 amino acid residues of Geminin. Delivery of this peptide sequence into the nucleus of HCT116 human colon cancer cells resulted in the suppression of BrdU incorporation. These results provide new insights into the function of Geminin and further validate Geminin as a potential therapeutic target in tumors.  相似文献   

11.
The specific oligopeptide transport system Opp is essential for growth of Lactococcus lactis in milk. We examined the biodiversity of oligopeptide transport specificity in the L. lactis species. Six strains were tested for (i) consumption of peptides during growth in a chemically defined medium and (ii) their ability to transport these peptides. Each strain demonstrated some specific preferences for peptide utilization, which matched the specificity of peptide transport. Sequencing of the binding protein OppA in some strains revealed minor differences at the amino acid level. The differences in specificity were used as a tool to unravel the role of the binding protein in transport specificity. The genes encoding OppA in four strains were cloned and expressed in L. lactis MG1363 deleted for its oppA gene. The substrate specificity of these engineered strains was found to be similar to that of the L. lactis MG1363 parental strain, whichever oppA gene was expressed. In situ binding experiments demonstrated the ability of OppA to interact with non-transported peptides. Taken together, these results provide evidence for a new concept. Despite that fact that OppA is essential for peptide transport, it is not the (main) determinant of peptide transport specificity in L. lactis.  相似文献   

12.
The oligopeptide transport system (Opp) of Lactococcus lactis belongs to the class of binding protein-dependent ABC-transporters. This system has the unique capacity to mediate the uptake of peptides from 4 up to at least 18 residues. Kinetic analysis of peptide binding to the binding protein, OppA, revealed a relationship between the peptide dissociation constants and the length of the ligand. The dissociation constants varied from submicromolar for dodecapeptides to millimolar for pentapeptides. This implies that the residues 6-12 of the peptide contribute to the binding affinity, and, in contrast to the current views on peptide binding by homologous proteins, these residues must interact with OppA. Analysis of pre-steady-state kinetics of binding showed that the observed differences in the -values result primarily from variations in the dissociation rate constants. These results are discussed in relation to the affinity constant for transport of these substrates. Overall, the data suggest that the slow dissociation rate constants for the larger peptides are rate determining in the translocation of peptides across the membrane.  相似文献   

13.
Lactococcal oligopeptide-binding protein A (OppA) binds peptides with widely varied lengths and sequences. We previously hypothesized that a hydrophobic pocket in OppA preferentially binds a hydrophobic peptide side chain and thus determines its binding register. Two crystal structures of OppA with different nonapeptides now indeed show binding in different registers.  相似文献   

14.
The structural properties required for the binding of peptide substrates to the Escherichia coli periplasmic protein involved in oligopeptide transport were surveyed by measuring the ability of different peptides to compete for binding in an equilibrium dialysis assay with the tripeptide Ala-Phe-[3H]Gly. The protein specifically bound oligopeptides and failed to bind amino acids or dipeptides. Acetylation of the peptide amino terminus of (Ala)3 severely impaired binding, whereas esterification of the carboxyl terminus significantly reduced but did not completely eliminate binding. Peptides composed of L-amino acids competed more effectively than did peptides containing D-residues or glycine. Experiments with a series of alanyl peptide homologs demonstrated a decrease in competitive ability with increasing chain length beyond tripeptide. Competition studies with tripeptide homologs indicated that a wide variety of amino acyl side chains were tolerated by the periplasmic protein, but side-chain composition did affect binding. Fluorescence emission data suggested that this periplasmic protein possesses more than one substrate-binding site capable of distinguishing peptides on the basis of amino acyl side chains.  相似文献   

15.
细菌的肽转运蛋白包括3种,寡肽转运蛋白(Oligopeptide permease,Opp)、二肽转运蛋白(Dipeptide permease,Dpp)和二/三肽转运蛋白(Di-and tripeptide permease,Dtp)。Opp和Dpp属于ABC型超家族(ATP-binding cassette superfamily)转运蛋白,利用ATP水解产生的能量实现底物转运。对Opp和Dpp研究最多的是胞外肽结合蛋白OppA和DppA,它们起着最初识别与结合底物的重要作用。Dtp属于主要协助转运蛋白超家族(Major facilitator superfamily,MFS),与质子进行底物共转运。细菌肽转运蛋白的晶体结构解析结合大量的生化数据分析,使得人们对其转运机制有了深入的了解。本文对这三种肽转运蛋白的研究进展分别进行综述。  相似文献   

16.
An enigma in the field of peptide transport is the structural basis for ligand promiscuity, as exemplified by PepT1, the mammalian plasma membrane peptide transporter. Here, we present crystal structures of di‐ and tripeptide‐bound complexes of a bacterial homologue of PepT1, which reveal at least two mechanisms for peptide recognition that operate within a single, centrally located binding site. The dipeptide was orientated laterally in the binding site, whereas the tripeptide revealed an alternative vertical binding mode. The co‐crystal structures combined with functional studies reveal that biochemically distinct peptide‐binding sites likely operate within the POT/PTR family of proton‐coupled symporters and suggest that transport promiscuity has arisen in part through the ability of the binding site to accommodate peptides in multiple orientations for transport.  相似文献   

17.
A number of recent studies have shown that heparan sulfate can control several important biological events on the cell surface through changes in sulfation pattern. The in vivo modification of sugar chains with sulfates, however, is complicated, and the discrimination of different sulfation patterns is difficult. Heparin, which is primarily produced by mast cells, is closely approximated by the structural analog heparan sulfate. Screening of heparin-associating peptides using phage display and antithrombin-bound affinity chromatography identified a peptide, heparin-associating peptide Y (HappY), that acts as a target of immobilized heparin. The peptide consists of 12 amino acid residues with characteristic three arginines and exclusively binds to heparin and heparan sulfate but does not associate with other glycosaminoglycans. HappY recognizes three consecutive monosaccharide residues in heparin through its three arginine residues. HappY should be a useful probe to detect heparin and heparan sulfate in studies of glycobiology.  相似文献   

18.
The peptide transporter (PTR) family represents a group of proton-coupled secondary transporters responsible for bulk uptake of amino acids in the form of di- and tripeptides, an essential process employed across species ranging from bacteria to humans. To identify amino acids critical for peptide transport in a prokaryotic PTR member, we have screened a library of mutants of the Escherichia coli peptide transporter YdgR using a high-throughput substrate uptake assay. We have identified 35 single point mutations that result in a full or partial loss of transport activity. Additional analysis, including homology modeling based on the crystal structure of the Shewanella oneidensis peptide transporter PepT(so), identifies Glu(56) and Arg(305) as potential periplasmic gating residues. In addition to providing new insights into transport by members of the PTR family, these mutants provide valuable tools for further study of the mechanism of peptide transport.  相似文献   

19.
The human transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) is a member of the ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporter superfamily. TAP plays an essential role in the antigen presentation pathway by translocating cytosolic peptides derived from proteasomal degradation into the endoplasmic reticulum lumen. Here, the peptides are loaded into major histocompatibility class I molecules to be in turn exposed at the cell surface for recognition by T-cells. TAP is a heterodimer formed by the association of two half-transporters, TAP1 and TAP2, with a typical ABC transporter core that consists of two nucleotide binding domains and two transmembrane domains. Despite the availability of biological data, a full understanding of the mechanism of action of TAP is limited by the absence of experimental structures of the full-length transporter. Here, we present homology models of TAP built on the crystal structures of P-glycoprotein, ABCB10, and Sav1866. The models represent the transporter in inward- and outward-facing conformations that could represent initial and final states of the transport cycle, respectively. We described conserved regions in the endoplasmic reticulum-facing loops with a role in the opening and closing of the cavity. We also identified conserved π-stacking interactions in the cytosolic part of the transmembrane domains that could explain the experimental data available for TAP1-Phe-265. Electrostatic potential calculations gave structural insights into the role of residues involved in peptide binding, such as TAP1-Val-288, TAP2-Cys-213, TAP2-Met-218. Moreover, these calculations identified additional residues potentially involved in peptide binding, in turn verified with replica exchange simulations performed on a peptide bound to the inward-facing models.  相似文献   

20.
Previous studies showed that peptide transport activity in Candida albicans was completely repressed by NH4+, and that growth on amino acids as sole nitrogen source stimulated transport to a basal level. Here we show that addition of peptide mixtures to culture media gives a further 5-fold increase in transport of dipeptides and oligopeptides; the effect is specific for peptide transport, amino acid uptake being unaffected. Presence of peptides but not amino acids overrides NH4+ repression of peptide transport. Step-up activation of transport activity, caused by addition of peptides to incubation media, and step-down inhibition that accompanies removal of peptides, occurs rapidly (within 30 min at 28 degrees C). Step-up is independent of de novo protein synthesis. This substrate-induced regulation is compatible with a rapid, reversible activation of plasma membrane-bound peptide permease(s), or a mechanism of endocytosis involving a cycle of insertion and retrieval of preformed permease components. These results are considered in relation to the expression of peptide permeases in vivo, and the development of synthetic anticandidal peptide carrier prodrugs designed to exploit these systems.  相似文献   

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