Abstract
GAT-1 is a sodium- and chloride-coupled GABA transporter and a member of the neurotransmitter:sodium:symporters, which are crucial for synaptic transmission. The structure of bacterial homologue LeuT shows a thin extracellular gate consisting of a charge and an aromatic pair. Here we addressed the question of whether mutation of the aromatic and charge pair residues of GAT-1 has similar consequences. In contrast to charge pair mutants, significant radioactive GABA transport was retained by mutants of the aromatic pair residue Phe-294. Moreover, the magnitude of maximal transport currents induced by GABA by these mutants was comparable with those by wild type GAT-1. However, the apparent affinity of the nonconserved mutants for GABA was reduced up to 20-fold relative to wild type. The voltage dependence of the sodium-dependent transient currents of the Phe-294 mutants was similar to that of the wild type. On the other hand, the conserved charge pair mutant D451E exhibited a right-shifted voltage dependence, indicating an increased apparent affinity for sodium. In further contrast to D451E, whereas the extracellular aqueous accessibility of an endogenous cysteine residue to a membrane-impermeant sulfhydryl reagent was increased relative to wild type, this was not the case for the aromatic pair mutants. Our data indicate that, in contrast to the charge pair, the aromatic pair is not essential for gating. Instead they are compatible with the idea that they serve to diminish dissociation of the substrate from the binding pocket.
Highlights
The extracellular gate in GAT-1 contains aromatic and charge pairs
The GABA concentration used for radioactive transport is generally far below the Km and was 23 nM (87.1 Ci/mMol), as compared with the Km value of 1–2 M for GAT-1-WT [26]
The reason is that large amounts of radioactive substrate are required to obtain a signal in the presence of saturating concentrations of unlabeled substrate, in particular for mutants with an increased Km. This limitation is absent when using an assay without radioactivity, namely GABA-induced transport currents
Summary
The extracellular gate in GAT-1 contains aromatic and charge pairs. Results: The impact of mutation of the pairs is different. The conserved charge pair mutant D451E exhibited a right-shifted voltage dependence, indicating an increased apparent affinity for sodium. In the absence of substrate, sodium binding can be indirectly monitored by measuring capacitative transient currents, which reflect a charge-moving sodium-dependent conformational change. In the outward occluded conformation, the binding pocket is separated from the cytoplasm by ϳ20 Å of ordered protein In addition to this “thick” cytoplasmic gate, the structure contains a “thin” extracellular gate, which is composed by conserved charge pair and aromatic pairs [8]. The voltage dependence of the transient currents by these mutants reflects an increased apparent affinity for sodium [7, 15] These mutant transporters are predominantly outward facing [7], as expected from a defect of their extracellular gate.
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