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- Title
Engineered MATE multidrug transporters reveal two functionally distinct ion-coupling pathways in NorM from Vibrio cholerae.
- Authors
Raturi, Sagar; Nair, Asha V.; Shinoda, Keiko; Singh, Himansha; Bai, Boyan; Murakami, Satoshi; Fujitani, Hideaki; van Veen, Hendrik W.
- Abstract
Multidrug and toxic compound extrusion (MATE) transport proteins confer multidrug resistance on pathogenic microorganisms and affect pharmacokinetics in mammals. Our understanding of how MATE transporters work, has mostly relied on protein structures and MD simulations. However, the energetics of drug transport has not been studied in detail. Many MATE transporters utilise the electrochemical H+ or Na+ gradient to drive substrate efflux, but NorM-VC from Vibrio cholerae can utilise both forms of metabolic energy. To dissect the localisation and organisation of H+ and Na+ translocation pathways in NorM-VC we engineered chimaeric proteins in which the N-lobe of H+-coupled NorM-PS from Pseudomonas stutzeri is fused to the C-lobe of NorM-VC, and vice versa. Our findings in drug binding and transport experiments with chimaeric, mutant and wildtype transporters highlight the versatile nature of energy coupling in NorM-VC, which enables adaptation to fluctuating salinity levels in the natural habitat of V. cholerae. Raturi and Nair et al. describe functional ion pathways within the MATE transporter NorM from Vibrio cholerae (NorM-VC). By creating chimeric proteins and mutants of NorM-VC and NorM-PS, they dissect the localisation of ion-coupling events and roles of conserved catalytic carboxylates in H+ binding and Na+ coordination, with findings useful to the field of transporters and drug resistance pumps.
- Subjects
MULTIDRUG resistance; VIBRIO cholerae; PATHOGENIC microorganisms; PHARMACOKINETICS; ELECTROCHEMICAL analysis
- Publication
Communications Biology, 2021, Vol 4, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
2399-3642
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1038/s42003-021-02081-6