Abstract

Using the energy of ATP hydrolysis, ABC transporters catalyze the trans-membrane transport of molecules. In bacteria, these transporters partner with a high-affinity substrate-binding protein (SBP) to import essential micronutrients. ATP binding by Type I ABC transporters (importers of amino acids, sugars, peptides, and small ions) stabilizes the interaction between the transporter and the SBP, thus allowing transfer of the substrate from the latter to the former. In Type II ABC transporters (importers of trace elements, e.g. vitamin B12, heme, and iron-siderophores) the role of ATP remains debatable. Here we studied the interaction between the Yersinia pestis ABC heme importer (HmuUV) and its partner substrate-binding protein (HmuT). Using real-time surface plasmon resonance experiments and interaction studies in membrane vesicles, we find that in the absence of ATP the transporter and the SBP tightly bind. Substrate in excess inhibits this interaction, and ATP binding by the transporter completely abolishes it. To release the stable docked SBP from the transporter hydrolysis of ATP is required. Based on these results we propose a mechanism for heme acquisition by HmuUV-T where the substrate-loaded SBP docks to the nucleotide-free outward-facing conformation of the transporter. ATP binding leads to formation of an occluded state with the substrate trapped in the trans-membrane translocation cavity. Subsequent ATP hydrolysis leads to substrate delivery to the cytoplasm, release of the SBP, and resetting of the system. We propose that other Type II ABC transporters likely share the fundamentals of this mechanism.

Highlights

  • Using the energy of ATP hydrolysis, ABC transporters catalyze the trans-membrane transport of molecules

  • Structural studies of the Type II ABC transporters BtuCD, MolBC, BhuUV, and HmuUV show that their structures are very similar [38, 41,42,43]

  • We found that HmuT stably associated to membranes prepared from HmuUV expressing cells, and no such association was observed with membranes prepared from cells expressing either BtuCD or MolBC (Fig. 1B)

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Summary

Edited by Thomas Söllner

Using the energy of ATP hydrolysis, ABC transporters catalyze the trans-membrane transport of molecules. In bacteria, these transporters partner with a high-affinity substrate-binding protein (SBP) to import essential micronutrients. ATP binding by Type I ABC transporters (importers of amino acids, sugars, peptides, and small ions) stabilizes the interaction between the transporter and the SBP, allowing transfer of the substrate from the latter to the former. In Type I transporters (importers of common metabolites, e.g. sugars and amino acids (30 – 32)), and in exporters, ATP binding induces conversion to an outward-facing conformation of the transporter, and promotes a stable interaction with the cognate SBP [33, 34]. Using surface plasmon resonance and interaction experiments performed in membrane vesicles, we observe that in HmuUV-T, ATP has a role that is very different from that described in Type I systems

Results
Binding and hydrolysis disrupt HmuUV and its binding protein
Hydrolysis of ATP releases stably docked HmuT from HmuUV
Discussion
ADP ADP
Protein expression and purification
SPR measurements
Association assays in membranes
ATP hydrolysis
Full Text
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