Abstract

The P-type ATPase protein family includes, in addition to ion pumps such as Ca2+-ATPase and Na+,K+-ATPase, also phospholipid flippases that transfer phospholipids between membrane leaflets. P-type ATPase ion pumps translocate their substrates occluded between helices in the center of the transmembrane part of the protein. The large size of the lipid substrate has stimulated speculation that flippases use a different transport mechanism. Information on the functional importance of the most centrally located helices M5 and M6 in the transmembrane domain of flippases has, however, been sparse. Using mutagenesis, we examined the entire M5-M6 region of the mammalian flippase ATP8A2 to elucidate its possible function in the lipid transport mechanism. This mutational screen yielded an informative map assigning important roles in the interaction with the lipid substrate to only a few M5-M6 residues. The M6 asparagine Asn-905 stood out as being essential for the lipid substrate-induced dephosphorylation. The mutants N905A/D/E/H/L/Q/R all displayed very low activities and a dramatic insensitivity to the lipid substrate. Strikingly, Asn-905 aligns with key ion-binding residues of P-type ATPase ion pumps, and N905D was recently identified as one of the mutations causing the neurological disorder cerebellar ataxia, mental retardation, and disequilibrium (CAMRQ) syndrome. Moreover, the effects of substitutions to the adjacent residue Val-906 (i.e. V906A/E/F/L/Q/S) suggest that the lipid substrate approaches Val-906 during the translocation. These results favor a flippase mechanism with strong resemblance to the ion pumps, despite a location of the translocation pathway in the periphery of the transmembrane part of the flippase protein.

Highlights

  • The P-type ATPase protein family includes, in addition to ion pumps such as Ca2؉-ATPase and Na؉,K؉-ATPase, phospholipid flippases that transfer phospholipids between membrane leaflets

  • We examined the entire M5-M6 region of the mammalian flippase ATP8A2 to elucidate its possible function in the lipid transport mechanism

  • The corresponding residues in the bovine flippase ATP8A2 studied here are in the following text, Fig. 3, and Table 1 marked by an asterisk: *Tyr-869, *Cys-870, *Tyr-872, *Lys-873, *Asn-874, and *Leu-877 of M5 and and *Asn-905, *Phe-908, and *Thr-909 of M6

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Summary

Introduction

The P-type ATPase protein family includes, in addition to ion pumps such as Ca2؉-ATPase and Na؉,K؉-ATPase, phospholipid flippases that transfer phospholipids between membrane leaflets. The effects of substitutions to the adjacent residue Val-906 (i.e. V906A/E/F/L/Q/S) suggest that the lipid substrate approaches Val-906 during the translocation These results favor a flippase mechanism with strong resemblance to the ion pumps, despite a location of the translocation pathway in the periphery of the transmembrane part of the flippase protein. Dephosphorylation depends on catalysis by a conserved glutamate in the A-domain and is stimulated by the binding of the lipid substrate from the exoplasmic bilayer leaflet, just like dephosphorylation of the Naϩ,Kϩ-ATPase is stimulated by the binding of extracellular Kϩ. These features argue for a catalytic cycle of flippases that involves four major conformational states, E1, E1P, E2P, and E2

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