Abstract

As a contributor to multidrug resistance, the family of multidrug and toxin extrusion (MATE) transporters couples the efflux of chemically dissimilar compounds to electrochemical ion gradients. Although divergent transport mechanisms have been proposed for these transporters, previous structural and functional analyses of members of the MATE subfamily DinF suggest that the N-terminal domain (NTD) supports substrate and ion binding. In this report, we investigated the relationship of ligand binding within the NTD to the drug resistance mechanism of the H+-dependent MATE from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Pyrococcus furiosus (PfMATE). To facilitate this study, we developed a cell growth assay in Escherichia coli to characterize the resistance conferred by PfMATE to toxic concentrations of the antimicrobial compound rhodamine 6G. Expression of WT PfMATE promoted cell growth in the presence of drug, but amino acid substitutions of conserved NTD residues compromised drug resistance. Steady-state binding analysis with purified PfMATE indicated that substrate affinity was unperturbed in these NTD variants. However, exploiting Trp fluorescence as an intrinsic reporter of conformational changes, we found that these variants impaired formation of a unique H+-stabilized structural intermediate. These results imply that disruption of H+ coupling is the origin of compromised toxin resistance in PfMATE variants. These findings support a model mechanism wherein the NTD mediates allosteric coupling to ion gradients through conformational changes to drive substrate transport in PfMATE. Furthermore, the results provide evidence for diverging transport mechanisms within a prokaryotic MATE subfamily.

Highlights

  • As a contributor to multidrug resistance, the family of multidrug and toxin extrusion (MATE) transporters couples the efflux of chemically dissimilar compounds to electrochemical ion gradients

  • To characterize PfMATE-mediated rhodamine 6G (R6G) resistance in vivo, we adapted a cell growth assay used previously to probe the survival of Escherichia coli expressing the Naϩ/Hϩ-dependent homolog NorM from Vibrio cholerae (NorM-Vc) when subjected to toxic concentrations of doxorubicin [30, 31]

  • This assay was shown to discriminate between variants of NorM-Vc that support or compromise cell growth, facilitating the correlation of apparent drug resistance to ion/drug-dependent conformational dynamics associated with the transport mechanism [30]

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Summary

ARTICLE cro

The N-terminal domain of an archaeal multidrug and toxin extrusion (MATE) transporter mediates proton coupling required for prokaryotic drug resistance. Claxton From the Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee 37232

Edited by Mike Shipston
Results
Discussion
Experimental procedures
Expression and purification of PfMATE
Tryptophan fluorescence
Full Text
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