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63


Structural biology. Symmetric transporters for asymmetric transport [Letter]

Karpowich, Nathan K; Wang, Da-Neng
PMCID:2630483
PMID: 18687947
ISSN: 1095-9203
CID: 81068

Three-dimensional Architecture of Hair-bundle Linkages Revealed by Electron-microscopic Tomography

Auer, Manfred; Koster, Abrahram J; Ziese, Ulrike; Bajaj, Chandrajit; Volkmann, Niels; Wang, Da Neng; Hudspeth, A J
The senses of hearing and balance rest upon mechanoelectrical transduction by the hair bundles of hair cells in the inner ear. Located at the apical cellular surface, each hair bundle comprises several tens of stereocilia and a single kinocilium that are interconnected by extracellular proteinaceous links. Using electron-microscopic tomography of bullfrog saccular sensory epithelia, we examined the three-dimensional structures of basal links, kinociliary links, and tip links. We observed significant differences in the appearances and dimensions of these three structures and found two distinct populations of tip links suggestive of the involvement of different proteins, splice variants, or protein-protein interactions. We noted auxiliary links connecting the upper portions of tip links to the taller stereocilia. Tip links and auxiliary links show a tendency to adopt a globular conformation when disconnected from the membrane surface
PMCID:2504599
PMID: 18421501
ISSN: 1525-3961
CID: 78730

Salt-bridge dynamics control substrate-induced conformational change in the membrane transporter GlpT

Law, Christopher J; Almqvist, Jonas; Bernstein, Adam; Goetz, Regina M; Huang, Yafei; Soudant, Celine; Laaksonen, Aatto; Hovmoller, Sven; Wang, Da-Neng
Active transport of substrates across cytoplasmic membranes is of great physiological, medical and pharmaceutical importance. The glycerol-3-phosphate (G3P) transporter (GlpT) of the E. coli inner membrane is a secondary active antiporter from the ubiquitous major facilitator superfamily that couples the import of G3P to the efflux of inorganic phosphate (P(i)) down its concentration gradient. Integrating information from a novel combination of structural, molecular dynamics simulations and biochemical studies, we identify the residues involved directly in binding of substrate to the inward-facing conformation of GlpT, thus defining the structural basis for the substrate-specificity of this transporter. The substrate binding mechanism involves protonation of a histidine residue at the binding site. Furthermore, our data suggest that the formation and breaking of inter- and intradomain salt bridges control the conformational change of the transporter that accompanies substrate translocation across the membrane. The mechanism we propose may be a paradigm for organophosphate:phosphate antiporters
PMCID:2426824
PMID: 18395745
ISSN: 1089-8638
CID: 78697

Ins and outs of major facilitator superfamily antiporters

Law, Christopher J; Maloney, Peter C; Wang, Da-Neng
The major facilitator superfamily (MFS) represents the largest group of secondary active membrane transporters, and its members transport a diverse range of substrates. Recent work shows that MFS antiporters, and perhaps all members of the MFS, share the same three-dimensional structure, consisting of two domains that surround a substrate translocation pore. The advent of crystal structures of three MFS antiporters sheds light on their fundamental mechanism; they operate via a single binding site, alternating-access mechanism that involves a rocker-switch type movement of the two halves of the protein. In the sn-glycerol-3-phosphate transporter (GlpT) from Escherichia coli, the substrate-binding site is formed by several charged residues and a histidine that can be protonated. Salt-bridge formation and breakage are involved in the conformational changes of the protein during transport. In this review, we attempt to give an account of a set of mechanistic principles that characterize all MFS antiporters
PMCID:2612782
PMID: 18537473
ISSN: 0066-4227
CID: 93312

Kinetic Evidence Is Consistent with the Rocker-Switch Mechanism of Membrane Transport by GlpT

Law, Christopher J; Yang, Qiang; Soudant, Celine; Maloney, Peter C; Wang, Da-Neng
Secondary active transport of substrate across the cell membrane is crucial to many cellular and physiological processes. The crystal structure of one member of the secondary active transporter family, the sn-glycerol-3-phosphate (G3P) transporter (GlpT) of the inner membrane of Escherichia coli, suggests a mechanism for substrate translocation across the membrane that involves a rocker-switch-type movement of the protein. This rocker-switch mechanism makes two specific predictions with respect to kinetic behavior: the transport rate increases with the temperature, whereas the binding affinity of the transporter to a substrate is temperature-independent. In this work, we directly tested these two predictions by transport kinetics and substrate-binding experiments, integrating the data on this single system into a coherent set of observations. The transport kinetics of the physiologically relevant G3P-phosphate antiport reaction were characterized at different temperatures using both E. coli whole cells and GlpT reconstituted into proteoliposomes. Substrate-binding affinity of the transporter was measured using tryptophan fluorescence quenching in detergent solution. Indeed, the substrate transport velocity of GlpT increased dramatically with temperature. In contrast, neither the apparent Michaelis constant (Km) nor the apparent substrate-binding dissociation constant (Kd) showed temperature dependence. Moreover, GlpT-catalyzed G3P translocation exhibited a completely linear Arrhenius function with an activation energy of 35.2 kJ mol-1 for the transporter reconstituted into proteoliposomes, suggesting that the substrate-loaded transporter is delicately poised between the inward- and outward-facing conformations. When these results are taken together, they are in agreement with a rocker-switch mechanism for GlpT
PMCID:2435215
PMID: 17915951
ISSN: 0006-2960
CID: 74677

LeuT-Desipramine Structure Reveals How Antidepressants Block Neurotransmitter Reuptake

Zhou, Zheng; Zhen, Juan; Karpowich, Nathan K; Goetz, Regina M; Law, Christopher J; Reith, Maarten E A; Wang, Da-Neng
Tricyclic antidepressants exert their pharmacological effect-inhibiting the reuptake of serotonin, norepinephrine, and dopamine-by directly blocking neurotransmitter transporters (SERT, NET, and DAT, respectively) in the presynaptic membrane. The drug-binding site and the mechanism of this inhibition are poorly understood. We determined the crystal structure at 2.9 A of the bacterial leucine transporter (LeuT), a homolog of SERT, NET, and DAT, in complex with leucine and the antidepressant desipramine. Desipramine binds at the inner end of the extracellular cavity of the transporter and is held in place by a hairpin loop and by a salt bridge. This binding site is separated from the leucine-binding site by the extracellular gate of the transporter. By directly locking the gate, desipramine prevents conformational changes and blocks substrate transport. Mutagenesis experiments on human SERT and DAT indicate that both the desipramine-binding site and its inhibition mechanism are probably conserved in the human neurotransmitter transporters
PMCID:3711652
PMID: 17690258
ISSN: 1095-9203
CID: 73794

Docking and homology modeling explain inhibition of the human vesicular glutamate transporters

Almqvist, Jonas; Huang, Yafei; Laaksonen, Aatto; Wang, Da-Neng; Hovmoller, Sven
As membrane transporter proteins, VGLUT1-3 mediate the uptake of glutamate into synaptic vesicles at presynaptic nerve terminals of excitatory neural cells. This function is crucial for exocytosis and the role of glutamate as the major excitatory neurotransmitter in the central nervous system. The three transporters, sharing 76% amino acid sequence identity in humans, are highly homologous but differ in regional expression in the brain. Although little is known regarding their three-dimensional structures, hydropathy analysis on these proteins predicts 12 transmembrane segments connected by loops, a topology similar to other members in the major facilitator superfamily, where VGLUT1-3 have been phylogenetically classified. In this work, we present a three-dimensional model for the human VGLUT1 protein based on its distant bacterial homolog in the same superfamily, the glycerol-3-phosphate transporter from Escherichia coli. This structural model, stable during molecular dynamics simulations in phospholipid bilayers solvated by water, reveals amino acid residues that face its pore and are likely to affect substrate translocation. Docking of VGLUT1 substrates to this pore localizes two different binding sites, to which inhibitors also bind with an overall trend in binding affinity that is in agreement with previously published experimental data
PMCID:2206968
PMID: 17660252
ISSN: 0961-8368
CID: 132718

Engineering and characterisation of chimeric monoclonal antibody 806 (ch806) for targeted immunotherapy of tumours expressing de2-7 EGFR or amplified EGFR

Panousis, C; Rayzman, V M; Johns, T G; Renner, C; Liu, Z; Cartwright, G; Lee, F-T; Wang, D; Gan, H; Cao, D; Kypridis, A; Smyth, F E; Brechbiel, M W; Burgess, A W; Old, L J; Scott, A M
We report the generation of a chimeric monoclonal antibody (ch806) with specificity for an epitope on the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) that is different from that targeted by all other anti-EGFR therapies. Ch806 antibody is reactive to both de2-7 and overexpressed wild-type (wt) EGFR but not native EGFR expressed in normal tissues at physiological levels. Ch806 was stably expressed in CHO (DHFR -/-) cells and purified for subsequent characterisation and validated for use in preliminary immunotherapy investigations. Ch806 retained the antigen binding specificity and affinity of the murine parental antibody. Furthermore, ch806 displayed enhanced antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity against target cells expressing the 806 antigen in the presence of human effector cells. Ch806 was successfully radiolabelled with both iodine-125 and indium-111 without loss of antigen binding affinity or specificity. The radioimmunoconjugates were stable in the presence of human serum at 37 degrees C for up to 9 days and displayed a terminal half-life (T(1/2beta)) of approximately 78 h in nude mice. Biodistribution studies undertaken in BALB/c nude mice bearing de2-7 EGFR-expressing or amplified EGFR-expressing xenografts revealed that (125)I-labelled ch806 failed to display any significant tumour retention. However, specific and prolonged tumour localisation of (111)In-labelled ch806 was demonstrated with uptake of 31%ID g(-1) and a tumour to blood ratio of 5 : 1 observed at 7 days postinjection. In vivo therapy studies with ch806 demonstrated significant antitumour effects on established de2-7 EGFR xenografts in BALB/c nude mice compared to control, and both murine 806 and the anti-EGFR 528 antibodies. These results support a potential therapeutic role of ch806 in the treatment of suitable EGFR-expressing tumours, and warrants further investigation of the potential of ch806 as a therapeutic agent
PMCID:2361945
PMID: 15770208
ISSN: 0007-0920
CID: 144958

Crystal structure and mechanism of GlpT, the glycerol-3-phosphate transporter from E. coli

Lemieux, M Joanne; Huang, Yafei; Wang, Da Neng
The major facilitator superfamily represents the largest group of secondary active membrane transporters in prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. They transport a vast variety of substrates, presumably via similar mechanisms, yet the details of these mechanisms remain unclear. Here we report the 3.3 A resolution structure of a member of this superfamily--GlpT, the glycerol-3-phosphate transporter from the E. coli inner membrane, in the absence of a substrate. The antiporter mediates the exchange of glycerol-3-phosphate for inorganic phosphate across the membrane. Its N- and C-terminal domains exhibit a pseudo 2-fold symmetry along an axis perpendicular to the membrane. Eight of the twelve transmembrane alpha-helices are arranged around a centrally located substrate translocation pore that is closed off at the periplasmic surface. Present at the beginning of the pore are two arginine residues that presumably comprise the substrate-binding site which is accessible only from the cytosol, suggesting an inward-facing conformation for the transporter. The central loop connecting the N- and C-terminal domains is partially disordered and exhibits reduced susceptibility to trypsin in the presence of substrate, indicating conformational changes. We propose that GlpT operates via a single binding-site, alternating-access mechanism
PMID: 16157640
ISSN: 1477-9986
CID: 76453

"Structural basis for substrate translocation of the escherichia coli glycerol-3-phosphate transporter, GlpT" [Meeting Abstract]

Lemieux, MJ; Huang, YF; Song, JM; Auer, M; Wang, DN
ISI:000223500600051
ISSN: 0005-2728
CID: 46475