Conformational Dynamics of Loop L3 in OmpF: Implications toward Antibiotic Translocation and Voltage Gating.
Abhishek AcharyaIshan GhaiClaudio PiselliJigneshkumar Dahyabhai PrajapatiRoland BenzMathias WinterhalterUlrich KleinekathöferPublished in: Journal of chemical information and modeling (2022)
In the present work, we delineate the molecular mechanism of a bulky antibiotic permeating through a bacterial channel and uncover the role of conformational dynamics of the constriction loop in this process. Using the temperature accelerated sliced sampling approach, we shed light onto the dynamics of the L3 loop, in particular the F118 to S125 segment, at the constriction regions of the OmpF porin. We complement the findings with single channel electrophysiology experiments and applied-field simulations, and we demonstrate the role of hydrogen-bond stabilization in the conformational dynamics of the L3 loop. A molecular mechanism of permeation is put forward wherein charged antibiotics perturb the network of stabilizing hydrogen-bond interactions and induce conformational changes in the L3 segment, thereby aiding the accommodation and permeation of bulky antibiotic molecules across the constriction region. We complement the findings with single channel electrophysiology experiments and demonstrate the importance of the hydrogen-bond stabilization in the conformational dynamics of the L3 loop. The generality of the present observations and experimental results regarding the L3 dynamics enables us to identify this L3 segment as the source of gating. We propose a mechanism of OmpF gating that is in agreement with previous experimental data that showed the noninfluence of cysteine double mutants that tethered the L3 tip to the barrel wall on the OmpF gating behavior. The presence of similar loop stabilization networks in porins of other clinically relevant pathogens suggests that the conformational dynamics of the constriction loop is possibly of general importance in the context of antibiotic permeation through porins.