Literature DB >> 32859752

Asp22 drives the protonation state of the Staphylococcus epidermidis glucose/H+ symporter.

Ana Filipa Santos Seica1, Cristina V Iancu2, Benedikt Pfeilschifter3, M Gregor Madej3, Jun-Yong Choe4,5, Petra Hellwig6.   

Abstract

The Staphylococcus epidermidis glucose/H+ symporter (GlcPSe) is a membrane transporter highly specific for glucose and a homolog of the human glucose transporters (GLUT, SLC2 family). Most GLUTs and their bacterial counterparts differ in the transport mechanism, adopting uniport and sugar/H+ symport, respectively. Unlike other bacterial GLUT homologs (for example, XylE), GlcPSe has a loose H+/sugar coupling. Asp22 is part of the proton-binding site of GlcPSe and crucial for the glucose/H+ co-transport mechanism. To determine how pH variations affect the proton site and the transporter, we performed surface-enhanced IR absorption spectroscopy on the immobilized GlcPSe We found that Asp22 has a pKa of 8.5 ± 0.1, a value consistent with that determined previously for glucose transport, confirming the central role of this residue for the transport mechanism of GlcPSe A neutral replacement of the negatively charged Asp22 led to positive charge displacements over the entire pH range, suggesting that the polarity change of the WT reflects the protonation state of Asp22 We expected that the substitution of the residue Ile105 for a serine, located within hydrogen-bonding distance to Asp22, would change the microenvironment, but the pKa of Asp22 corresponded to that of the WT. A167E mutation, selected in analogy to the XylE, introduced an additional protonatable site and perturbed the protonation state of Asp22, with the latter now exhibiting a pKa of 6.4. These studies confirm that Asp22 is the proton-binding residue in GlcPSe and show that charged residues in its vicinity affect the pKa of glucose/H+ symport.
© 2020 Seica et al.

Entities:  

Keywords:  glucose transport; major facilitator family; major facilitator superfamily; membrane proteins; membrane transport; pK value; proton transport; spectroscopy; surface-enhanced infrared spectroscopy; transport; transport proteins

Year:  2020        PMID: 32859752      PMCID: PMC7650245          DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA120.014069

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  45 in total

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8.  Crystal structure of a bacterial homologue of glucose transporters GLUT1-4.

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Review 9.  Hypoxic regulation of glucose transport, anaerobic metabolism and angiogenesis in cancer: novel pathways and targets for anticancer therapeutics.

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10.  A Loose Relationship: Incomplete H+/Sugar Coupling in the MFS Sugar Transporter GlcP.

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