Abstract

Sulfate transporters in plants represent a family of proteins containing transmembrane domains that constitute the catalytic part of the protein and a short linking region that joins this catalytic moiety with a C-terminal STAS domain. The STAS domain resembles an anti-sigma factor antagonist of Bacillus subtilis, which is one distinguishing feature of the SLC26 transporter family; this family includes transporters for sulfate and other anions such as iodide and carbonate. Recent work has demonstrated that this domain is critical for the activity of Arabidopsis thaliana sulfate transporters, and specific lesions in this domain, or the exchange of STAS domains between different sulfate transporters, can severely impair transport activity. In this work we generated a Saccharomyces cerevisiae expression library of the A. thaliana Sultr1;2 gene with random mutations in the linking region-STAS domain and identified STAS domain lesions that altered Sultr1;2 biogenesis and/or function. A number of mutations in the beta-sheet that forms the core of the STAS domain prevented intracellular accumulation of Sultr1;2. In contrast, the linking region and one surface of the STAS domain containing N termini of the first and second alpha-helices have a number of amino acids critical for the function of the protein; mutations in these regions still allow protein accumulation in the plasma membrane, but the protein is no longer capable of efficiently transporting sulfate into cells. These results suggest that the STAS domain is critical for both the activity and biosynthesis/stability of the transporter, and that STAS sub-domains correlate with these specific functions.

Highlights

  • This study focused on determining residues of the L-STAS domain critical for biogenesis and functionality of Sultr1;2

  • We identified alleles with lesions in the L-STAS domain that could complement the CP154-7B phenotype (Class III), usually not fully restore the growth rate in low SO42Ϫ medium

  • The L region was shown to be of importance for transporter function, it could not be modeled because it is not very similar to other known structures in the Protein Data Bank (PDB)

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Summary

Function of STAS Domain in Sulfate Transporters

DRA ClϪ-HCO3Ϫ antiporter have demonstrated the importance of STAS domain interactions with the regulatory sequence of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator, a cAMP-regulated ClϪ channel. This interaction modulates the activity of both the transporter and the channel (16). In this study we generated a yeast expression library of the A. thaliana Sultr1;2 gene that had random mutations in the L-STAS domain and selected individual, mutated Sultr1;2 genes by transforming them into CP154-7B, which is null for the two major S. cerevisiae sulfate transporters (21). The consequences of mutations in the STAS domain are discussed and interpreted with the aid of a computer-derived structural model based on the crystal structure of SpoIIAA (14, 22)

Yeast Strains
RESULTS
Summary of mutations analyzed in this work
Localization to plasmamembrane
DISCUSSION
Doubling time
Full Text
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