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The bacterial dicarboxylate transporter VcINDY uses a two-domain elevator-type mechanism.

Christopher MulliganCristina Fenollar-FerrerGabriel A FitzgeraldAriela Vergara-JaqueDesirée KaufmannYan LiLucy R ForrestJoseph A Mindell
Published in: Nature structural & molecular biology (2016)
Secondary transporters use alternating-access mechanisms to couple uphill substrate movement to downhill ion flux. Most known transporters use a 'rocking bundle' motion, wherein the protein moves around an immobile substrate-binding site. However, the glutamate-transporter homolog GltPh translocates its substrate-binding site vertically across the membrane, through an 'elevator' mechanism. Here, we used the 'repeat swap' approach to computationally predict the outward-facing state of the Na(+)/succinate transporter VcINDY, from Vibrio cholerae. Our model predicts a substantial elevator-like movement of VcINDY's substrate-binding site, with a vertical translation of ~15 Å and a rotation of ~43°. Our observation that multiple disulfide cross-links completely inhibit transport provides experimental confirmation of the model and demonstrates that such movement is essential. In contrast, cross-links across the VcINDY dimer interface preserve transport, thus revealing an absence of large-scale coupling between protomers.
Keyphrases
  • amino acid
  • magnetic resonance
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • high speed
  • computed tomography
  • protein protein
  • contrast enhanced