Abstract

Excitatory amino acid transporters (EAATs) are prototypical dual function proteins that function as coupled glutamate/Na+/H+/K+ transporters and as anion-selective channels. Both transport functions are intimately intertwined at the structural level: Secondary active glutamate transport is based on elevator-like movements of the mobile transport domain across the membrane, and the lateral movement of this domain results in anion channel opening. This particular anion channel gating mechanism predicts the existence of mutant transporters with changed anion channel properties, but without alteration in glutamate transport. We here report that the L46P mutation in the human EAAT2 transporter fulfills this prediction. L46 is a pore-forming residue of the EAAT2 anion channels at the cytoplasmic entrance into the ion conduction pathway. In whole-cell patch clamp recordings, we observed larger macroscopic anion current amplitudes for L46P than for WT EAAT2. Rapid l-glutamate application under forward transport conditions demonstrated that L46P does not reduce the transport rate of individual transporters. In contrast, changes in selectivity made gluconate permeant in L46P EAAT2, and nonstationary noise analysis revealed slightly increased unitary current amplitudes in mutant EAAT2 anion channels. We used unitary current amplitudes and individual transport rates to quantify absolute open probabilities of EAAT2 anion channels from ratios of anion currents by glutamate uptake currents. This analysis revealed up to 7-fold increased absolute open probability of L46P EAAT2 anion channels. Our results reveal an important determinant of the diameter of EAAT2 anion pore and demonstrate the existence of anion channel gating processes outside the EAAT uptake cycle.

Highlights

  • After release from presynaptic nerve terminals, glutamate is quickly removed from the synaptic cleft by a family of glutamate transporters, the excitatory amino acid transporters (EAATs) [1,2,3]

  • In a series of experiments in which EAAT residues that are homologous to anion pore-forming residues in GltPh [25] were substituted by proline, we found that L46P substantially increases macroscopic anion current amplitudes of EAAT2

  • A mutation increasing EAAT anion channel open probability domains, and leucine 46 is not conserved among the family

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Summary

Introduction

After release from presynaptic nerve terminals, glutamate is quickly removed from the synaptic cleft by a family of glutamate transporters, the excitatory amino acid transporters (EAATs) [1,2,3]. Because expression levels of WT and mutant transporters are similar, the observed differences in L46P EAAT2 macroscopic current amplitude might be because of increased mutant anion channel conductances or open probabilities.

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