Login / Signup

Na+-dependent gate dynamics and electrostatic attraction ensure substrate coupling in glutamate transporters.

Claudia AllevaKirill V KovalevRoman AstashkinM I BerndtC BaekenTaras BalandinV GordeliyChristoph FahlkeJan-Philipp Machtens
Published in: Science advances (2020)
Excitatory amino acid transporters (EAATs) harness [Na+], [K+], and [H+] gradients for fast and efficient glutamate removal from the synaptic cleft. Since each glutamate is cotransported with three Na+ ions, [Na+] gradients are the predominant driving force for glutamate uptake. We combined all-atom molecular dynamics simulations, fluorescence spectroscopy, and x-ray crystallography to study Na+:substrate coupling in the EAAT homolog GltPh A lipidic cubic phase x-ray crystal structure of wild-type, Na+-only bound GltPh at 2.5-Å resolution revealed the fully open, outward-facing state primed for subsequent substrate binding. Simulations and kinetic experiments established that only the binding of two Na+ ions to the Na1 and Na3 sites ensures complete HP2 gate opening via a conformational selection-like mechanism and enables high-affinity substrate binding via electrostatic attraction. The combination of Na+-stabilized gate opening and electrostatic coupling of aspartate to Na+ binding provides a constant Na+:substrate transport stoichiometry over a broad range of neurotransmitter concentrations.
Keyphrases
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • amino acid
  • single molecule
  • high resolution
  • magnetic resonance
  • quantum dots
  • computed tomography
  • single cell
  • room temperature
  • solid state
  • electron transfer