multidrug resistance transporter
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

110
(FIVE YEARS 6)

H-INDEX

31
(FIVE YEARS 0)

2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ali A Kermani ◽  
Olive E. Burata ◽  
B Ben Koff ◽  
Akiko Koide ◽  
Shohei Koide ◽  
...  

Proteins from the bacterial small multidrug resistance (SMR) family are proton-coupled exporters of diverse antiseptics and antimicrobials, including polyaromatic cations and quaternary ammonium compounds. The transport mechanism of the Escherichia coli transporter, EmrE, has been studied extensively, but a lack of high-resolution structural information has impeded a structural description of its molecular mechanism. Here we apply a novel approach, multipurpose crystallization chaperones, to solve several structures of EmrE, including a 2.9 Å structure at low pH without substrate. We report five additional structures in complex with structurally diverse transported substrates, including quaternary phosphonium, quaternary ammonium, and planar polyaromatic compounds. These structures show that binding site tryptophan and glutamate residues adopt different rotamers to conform to disparate structures without requiring major rearrangements of the backbone structure. Structural and functional comparison to Gdx-Clo, an SMR protein that transports a much narrower spectrum of substrates, suggests that in EmrE, a relatively sparse hydrogen bond network among binding site residues permits increased sidechain flexibility.


2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (46) ◽  
pp. e2107335118
Author(s):  
Jiangfeng Zhao ◽  
Hao Xie ◽  
Ahmad Reza Mehdipour ◽  
Schara Safarian ◽  
Ulrich Ermler ◽  
...  

Multidrug and toxic compound extrusion (MATE) transporters are widespread in all domains of life. Bacterial MATE transporters confer multidrug resistance by utilizing an electrochemical gradient of H+ or Na+ to export xenobiotics across the membrane. Despite the availability of X-ray structures of several MATE transporters, a detailed understanding of the transport mechanism has remained elusive. Here we report the crystal structure of a MATE transporter from Aquifex aeolicus at 2.0-Å resolution. In light of its phylogenetic placement outside of the diversity of hitherto-described MATE transporters and the lack of conserved acidic residues, this protein may represent a subfamily of prokaryotic MATE transporters, which was proven by phylogenetic analysis. Furthermore, the crystal structure and substrate docking results indicate that the substrate binding site is located in the N bundle. The importance of residues surrounding this binding site was demonstrated by structure-based site-directed mutagenesis. We suggest that Aq_128 is functionally similar but structurally diverse from DinF subfamily transporters. Our results provide structural insights into the MATE transporter, which further advances our global understanding of this important transporter family.


Author(s):  
Bo Zhang ◽  
Zhengzhong Kang ◽  
Junqiao Zhang ◽  
Yu Kang ◽  
Lijun Liang ◽  
...  

Studying the binding ability of P-gp with multiple drug molecules reveals insights into the promiscuous nature of P-gp.


2019 ◽  
Vol 116 (3) ◽  
pp. 127a
Author(s):  
Josh V. Vermaas ◽  
Susan L. Rempe ◽  
Emad Tajkhorshid

Author(s):  
Jun Jun Du ◽  
GuanFu Duan ◽  
Changge Ji ◽  
Jianing Song ◽  
J.Z.H. Zhang

The multidrug resistance transporter NorM is an important drug resistance pump and plays a critical role in multidrug resistance in bacteria and mammals. In this study we carried out molecular dynamics simulation to study the mechanism of Na+ binding and dynamical structures of two long loops in the substrate-releasing process in substrate binding NorM. Our simulation study identified several key residues (D41, E261 D377) along the Na+ binding pathway and a multi-state ion-binding mechanism is proposed based on the simulation study. In this proposed model, the transport of Na+ is a multi-stage process with D41 being the first station for binding to Na+, followed by Na+ binding to the second station E262 and finally to the cation-binding site of E262 and D377. During the transport of Na+, the transmembrane components TM1, TM7 and TM2 are rearranged to facilitate the ion transport as well conformational changes of NorM to a closed state. Further, substrate-bound simulation revealed that Loop3-4 and Loop9-10 control the substrate-releasing process.


2018 ◽  
Vol 115 (32) ◽  
pp. E7502-E7511 ◽  
Author(s):  
Josh V. Vermaas ◽  
Susan B. Rempe ◽  
Emad Tajkhorshid

EmrE is a small, homodimeric membrane transporter that exploits the established electrochemical proton gradient across the Escherichia coli inner membrane to export toxic polyaromatic cations, prototypical of the wider small-multidrug resistance transporter family. While prior studies have established many fundamental aspects of the specificity and rate of substrate transport in EmrE, low resolution of available structures has hampered identification of the transport coupling mechanism. Here we present a complete, refined atomic structure of EmrE optimized against available cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) data to delineate the critical interactions by which EmrE regulates its conformation during the transport process. With the model, we conduct molecular dynamics simulations of the transporter in explicit membranes to probe EmrE dynamics under different substrate loading and conformational states, representing different intermediates in the transport cycle. The refined model is stable under extended simulation. The water dynamics in simulation indicate that the hydrogen-bonding networks around a pair of solvent-exposed glutamate residues (E14) depend on the loading state of EmrE. One specific hydrogen bond from a tyrosine (Y60) on one monomer to a glutamate (E14) on the opposite monomer is especially critical, as it locks the protein conformation when the glutamate is deprotonated. The hydrogen bond provided by Y60 lowers the pKa of one glutamate relative to the other, suggesting both glutamates should be protonated for the hydrogen bond to break and a substrate-free transition to take place. These findings establish the molecular mechanism for the coupling between proton transfer reactions and protein conformation in this proton-coupled secondary transporter.


2018 ◽  
Vol 62 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marwah Saleh ◽  
Denice C. Bay ◽  
Raymond J. Turner

ABSTRACT EmrE is the archetypical member of the small multidrug resistance transporter family and confers resistance to a wide range of disinfectants and dyes known as quaternary cation compounds (QCCs). The aim of this study was to examine which conserved amino acids play an important role in substrate selectivity. On the basis of a previous analysis of EmrE homologues, a total of 33 conserved residues were targeted for cysteine or alanine replacement within E. coli EmrE. The antimicrobial resistance of each EmrE variant expressed in Escherichia coli strain JW0451 (lacking dominant pump acrB) to a collection of 16 different QCCs was tested using agar spot dilution plating to determine MIC values. The results determined that only a few conserved residues were drug polyselective, based on ≥4-fold decreases in MIC values: the active-site residue E14 (E14D and E14A) and 4 additional conserved residues (A10C, F44C, L47C, W63A). EmrE variants I11C, V15C, P32C, I62C, L93C, and S105C enhanced resistance to polyaromatic QCCs, while the remaining EmrE variants reduced resistance to one or more QCCs with shared chemical features: acylation, tri- and tetraphenylation, aromaticity, and dicationic charge. Mapping of EmrE variants onto transmembrane helical wheel projections using the highest resolved EmrE structure suggests that polyselective EmrE variants were located closest to the helical faces surrounding the predicted drug binding pocket, while EmrE variants with greater drug specificity mapped onto distal helical faces. This study reveals that few conserved residues are essential for drug polyselectivity and indicates that aromatic QCC selection involves a greater portion of conserved residues than that in other QCCs.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document