Abstract

The lactose transport protein (LacS) of Streptococcus thermophilus belongs to a family of transporters in which putative alpha-helices II and IV have been implicated in cation binding and the coupled transport of the substrate and the cation. Here, the analysis of site-directed mutants shows that a positive and negative charge at positions 64 and 71 in helix II are essential for transport, but not for lactose binding. The conservation of charge/side-chain properties is less critical for Glu-67 and Ile-70 in helix II, and Asp-133 and Lys-139 in helix IV, but these residues are important for the coupled transport of lactose together with a proton. The analysis of second-site suppressor mutants indicates an ion pair exists between helices II and IV, and thus a close approximation of these helices can be made. The second-site suppressor analysis also suggests ion pairing between helix II and the intracellular loops 6-7 and 10-11. Because the C-terminal region of the transmembrane domain, especially helix XI and loop 10-11, is important for substrate binding in this family of proteins, we propose that sugar and proton binding and translocation are performed by the joint action of these regions in the protein. Indeed, substrate protection of maleimide labeling of single cysteine mutants confirms that alpha-helices II and IV are directly interacting or at least conformationally involved in sugar binding and/or translocation. On the basis of new and published data, we reason that the helices II, IV, VII, X, and XI and the intracellular loops 6-7 and 10-11 are in close proximity and form the binding sites and/or the translocation pathway in the transporters of the galactosides-pentosides-hexuronides family.

Highlights

  • The lactose transport protein, LacS, of Streptococcus thermophilus is a secondary transport system that belongs to the family of the galactosides-pentosides-hexuronides (GPH)1 transporters [1]

  • The lactose transport protein (LacS) of S. thermophilus has several charged amino acids in the second and fourth transmembrane ␣-helix that are highly conserved within the GPH family (Fig. 1)

  • Because LacS(R64C) and LacS(D71C) were inactive, it was possible that these mutants were not assembled in the cytoplasmic membrane

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Summary

Introduction

The lactose transport protein, LacS, of Streptococcus thermophilus is a secondary transport system that belongs to the family of the galactosides-pentosides-hexuronides (GPH) transporters [1]. The strongly hydrophilic character of one side of the transmembrane helices II and IV results from the presence of a number of conserved positively and negatively charged residues (see Fig. 1). These residues are thought to coordinate cation binding in the melibiose carrier (MelB) from Escherichia coli [1, 11, 12, 13]. A conserved residue Glu-379 in this loop is essential in coupling the transport of protons to the transport of sugar, because neutral substitution renders LacS unable to catalyze lactose-Hϩ symport, whereas equilibrium transport is still catalyzed with wild type rates [5]. R64C I65C E67C I70C D71C D133C V134C F135C Y136C K139C D71C, R230A D71C, R230D D71C, L357F D71C, R377H D71C, R377C D71C, R377D D71C, D378N D71C, D378C R64C, D133N R64C, D133C R64C, D133R

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