Coupling substrate and ion binding to extracellular gate of a sodium-dependent aspartate transporter. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Secondary transporters are integral membrane proteins that catalyse the movement of substrate molecules across the lipid bilayer by coupling substrate transport to one or more ion gradients, thereby providing a mechanism for the concentrative uptake of substrates. Here we describe crystallographic and thermodynamic studies of Glt(Ph), a sodium (Na+)-coupled aspartate transporter, defining sites for aspartate, two sodium ions and d,l-threo-beta-benzyloxyaspartate, an inhibitor. We further show that helical hairpin 2 is the extracellular gate that controls access of substrate and ions to the internal binding sites. At least two sodium ions bind in close proximity to the substrate and these sodium-binding sites, together with the sodium-binding sites in another sodium-coupled transporter, LeuT, define an unwound alpha-helix as the central element of the ion-binding motif, a motif well suited to the binding of sodium and to participation in conformational changes that accompany ion binding and unbinding during the transport cycle.

publication date

  • January 17, 2007

Research

keywords

  • Amino Acid Transport Systems
  • Aspartic Acid
  • Pyrococcus horikoshii
  • Sodium

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 33846505059

PubMed ID

  • 17230192

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 445

issue

  • 7126