Abstract

EmrE is the archetypical member of the small multidrug resistance transporter family and confers resistance to a wide range of disinfectants and dyes known as quaternary cation compounds (QCCs). The aim of this study was to examine which conserved amino acids play an important role in substrate selectivity. On the basis of a previous analysis of EmrE homologues, a total of 33 conserved residues were targeted for cysteine or alanine replacement within E. coli EmrE. The antimicrobial resistance of each EmrE variant expressed in Escherichia coli strain JW0451 (lacking dominant pump acrB) to a collection of 16 different QCCs was tested using agar spot dilution plating to determine MIC values. The results determined that only a few conserved residues were drug polyselective, based on ≥4-fold decreases in MIC values: the active-site residue E14 (E14D and E14A) and 4 additional conserved residues (A10C, F44C, L47C, W63A). EmrE variants I11C, V15C, P32C, I62C, L93C, and S105C enhanced resistance to polyaromatic QCCs, while the remaining EmrE variants reduced resistance to one or more QCCs with shared chemical features: acylation, tri- and tetraphenylation, aromaticity, and dicationic charge. Mapping of EmrE variants onto transmembrane helical wheel projections using the highest resolved EmrE structure suggests that polyselective EmrE variants were located closest to the helical faces surrounding the predicted drug binding pocket, while EmrE variants with greater drug specificity mapped onto distal helical faces. This study reveals that few conserved residues are essential for drug polyselectivity and indicates that aromatic QCC selection involves a greater portion of conserved residues than that in other QCCs.

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