4.7 Article

Repeat-swap homology modeling of secondary active transporters: updated protocol and prediction of elevator-type mechanisms

期刊

FRONTIERS IN PHARMACOLOGY
卷 6, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2015.00183

关键词

neurotransmitter; membrane protein; secondary transport; alternating access; asymmetry exchange; glutamate; concentrative nucleoside transporter

资金

  1. Division of Intramural Research of the NIH, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
  2. L'Oreal Chile-UNESCO Women in Science fellowship
  3. L'Oreal-UNESCO Rising Talent Award

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Secondary active transporters are critical for neurotransmitter clearance and recycling during synaptic transmission and uptake of nutrients. These proteins mediate the movement of solutes against their concentration gradients, by using the energy released in the movement of ions down pre-existing concentration gradients. To achieve this, transporters conform to the so-called alternating-access hypothesis, whereby the protein adopts at least two conformations in which the substrate binding sites are exposed to one or other side of the membrane, but not both simultaneously. Structures of a bacterial homolog of neuronal glutamate transporters, Glt(Ph), in several different conformational states have revealed that the protein structure is asymmetric in the outward- and inward-open states, and that the conformational change connecting them involves a elevator-like movement of a substrate binding domain across the membrane. The structural asymmetry is created by inverted-topology repeats, i.e., structural repeats with similar overall folds whose transmembrane topologies are related to each other by two-fold pseudo-symmetry around an axis parallel to the membrane plane. Inverted repeats have been found in around three-quarters of secondary transporter folds. Moreover, the (a)symmetry of these systems has been successfully used as a bioinformatic tool, called repeat-swap modeling to predict structural models of a transporter in one conformation using the known structure of the transporter in the complementary conformation as a template. Here, we describe an updated repeatswap homology modeling protocol, and calibrate the accuracy of the method using Glt(Ph), for which both inward- and outward-facing conformations are known. We then apply this repeat-swap homology modeling procedure to a concentrative nucleoside transporter, VcCNT, which has a three-dimensional arrangement related to that of Glt(Ph). The repeat-swapped model of VcCNT predicts that nucleoside transport also occurs via an elevator-like mechanism.

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