Noncanonical role for the binding protein in substrate uptake by the MetNI methionine ATP Binding Cassette (ABC) transporter
Abstract
The Escherichia coli methionine ABC transporter MetNI exhibits both high-affinity transport toward L-methionine and broad specificity toward methionine derivatives, including D-methionine. In this work, we characterize the transport of D-methionine derivatives by the MetNI transporter. Unexpectedly, the N229A substrate-binding deficient variant of the cognate binding protein MetQ was found to support high MetNI transport activity toward D-selenomethionine. We determined the crystal structure at 2.95 Å resolution of the ATPγS-bound MetNIQ complex in the outward-facing conformation with the N229A apo MetQ variant. This structure revealed conformational changes in MetQ providing substrate access through the binding protein to the transmembrane translocation pathway. MetQ likely mediates uptake of methionine derivatives through two mechanisms: in the methionine-bound form delivering substrate from the periplasm to the transporter (the canonical mechanism) and in the apo form by facilitating ligand binding when complexed to the transporter (the noncanonical mechanism). This dual role for substrate-binding proteins is proposed to provide a kinetic strategy for ABC transporters to transport both high- and low-affinity substrates present in a physiological concentration range.
Additional Information
© 2018 the Author(s). Published by PNAS. This open access article is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License 4.0 (CC BY-NC-ND). Contributed by Douglas C. Rees, August 26, 2018 (sent for review June 26, 2018; reviewed by Bert Poolman and Nieng Yan). PNAS published ahead of print October 23, 2018. Data and Materials Availability: Coordinates and structure factors have been deposited in the Protein Data Bank of the Research Collaboratory for Structural Bioinformatics, with PDB ID code 6CVL. The MetNI and MetQ constructs have been deposited with Addgene, with IDs 118269 (N295A E166Q MetNI) and 118268 (N229A MetQ) for the structural work, and IDs 118253, 118254, 118256–118261 and 118581 for the transport assay (Table 1). We thank Dr. Raymond Liu for critical reading of the manuscript and Dr. Nathan Dalleska and Stefan Petrovic for assistance with ICP-MS and ITC, respectively. A Vietnam International Education Development scholarship from the Vietnam Ministry of Education and Training (to P.T.N.) is gratefully acknowledged. We gratefully acknowledge the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation and the Beckman Institute at Caltech for their generous support of the Molecular Observatory at Caltech and the staff at Beamline 12-2, SSRL, for their assistance with data collection. SSRL is operated for the US Department of Energy and supported by its Office of Biological and Environmental Research and by the NIH, National Institute of General Medical Sciences (P41GM103393), and the National Center for Research Resources (P41RR001209). We thank the Center for Environmental Microbial Interactions for their support of microbiology research at Caltech. D.C.R. is an investigator at Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Author contributions: P.T.N. and D.C.R. designed research; P.T.N., J.Y.L., A.T.L., and J.T.K. performed research; P.T.N., J.Y.L., and A.T.L. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; P.T.N., J.Y.L., A.T.L., J.T.K., and D.C.R. analyzed data; and P.T.N. and D.C.R. wrote the paper. Reviewers: B.P., University of Groningen; and N.Y., Princeton University. The authors declare no conflict of interest. Data deposition: The atomic coordinates and structure factors have been deposited in the Protein Data Bank, www.wwpdb.org (PDB ID code 6CVL). The MetNI and MetQ constructs generated in this work have been deposited in Addgene [ID codes 118268 (N229A MetQ) and 118269 (N295A E166Q MetNI) for the structural work, and ID codes 118253, 118254, 118256–118261, and 118581 for the transport assay]. This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1811003115/-/DCSupplemental.Attached Files
Published - E10596.full.pdf
Supplemental Material - pnas.1811003115.sapp.pdf
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Additional details
- PMCID
- PMC6233128
- Eprint ID
- 90370
- DOI
- 10.1073/pnas.1811003115
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20181023-130948201
- Ministry of Education and Training (Vietnam)
- Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation
- Caltech Beckman Institute
- NIH
- P41GM103393
- NIH
- P41RR001209
- Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI)
- Created
-
2018-10-23Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2021-11-16Created from EPrint's last_modified field