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Functionally Important Carboxyls in a Bacterial Homologue of the Vesicular Monoamine Transporter (VMAT)
Authors:Dana Yaffe  Ariela Vergara-Jaque  Yonatan Shuster  Dina Listov  Sitaram Meena  Satinder K Singh  Lucy R Forrest  Shimon Schuldiner
Institution:From the Department of Biological Chemistry, Alexander Silberman Institute of Life Sciences, Hebrew University, 91904 Jerusalem, Israel.;the §Computational Structural Biology Section, NINDS, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20852, and ;the Department of Cellular and Molecular Physiology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06520
Abstract:Transporters essential for neurotransmission in mammalian organisms and bacterial multidrug transporters involved in antibiotic resistance are evolutionarily related. To understand in more detail the evolutionary aspects of the transformation of a bacterial multidrug transporter to a mammalian neurotransporter and to learn about mechanisms in a milieu amenable for structural and biochemical studies, we identified, cloned, and partially characterized bacterial homologues of the rat vesicular monoamine transporter (rVMAT2). We performed preliminary biochemical characterization of one of them, Brevibacillus brevis monoamine transporter (BbMAT), from the bacterium B. brevis. BbMAT shares substrates with rVMAT2 and transports them in exchange with >1H+, like the mammalian transporter. Here we present a homology model of BbMAT that has the standard major facilitator superfamily fold; that is, with two domains of six transmembrane helices each, related by 2-fold pseudosymmetry whose axis runs normal to the membrane and between the two halves. The model predicts that four carboxyl residues, a histidine, and an arginine are located in the transmembrane segments. We show here that two of the carboxyls are conserved, equivalent to the corresponding ones in rVMAT2, and are essential for H+-coupled transport. We conclude that BbMAT provides an excellent experimental paradigm for the study of its mammalian counterparts and bacterial multidrug transporters.
Keywords:Antibiotic Resistance  Membrane Transport  Multidrug Transporter  Neurotransmitter  Neurotransmitter Transport  Proton Transport
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