2 research outputs found
Assessing Interactions Between a Polytopic Membrane Protein and Lipid Bilayers Using Differential Scanning Calorimetry and Solid-State NMR
It is known that the lipid composition
within a cellular membrane
can influence membrane protein structure and function. In this Article,
we investigated how structural changes to a membrane protein upon
substrate binding can impact the lipid bilayer. To carry out this
study, we reconstituted the secondary active drug transporter EmrE
into a variety of phospholipid bilayers varying in headgroup and chain
length and carried out differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and
solid-state NMR experiments. The DSC results revealed a difference
in cooperativity of the lipid phase transition for drug-free EmrE
protonated at glutamic acid 14 (i.e., proton-loaded form) and the
tetraphenylphosphonium (TPP<sup>+</sup>) bound form of the protein
(i.e., drug-loaded form). To complement these findings, we acquired
magic-angle-spinning (MAS) spectra in the presence and absence of
TPP<sup>+</sup> by directly probing the phospholipid headgroup using <sup>31</sup>P NMR. These spectra showed a reduction in lipid line widths
around the main phase transition for samples where EmrE was bound
to TPP<sup>+</sup> compared to the drug free form. Finally, we collected
oriented solid-state NMR spectra on isotopically enriched EmrE that
displayed chemical shift perturbations to both transmembrane and loop
residues upon TPP<sup>+</sup> binding. All of these results prompt
us to propose a mechanism whereby substrate-induced changes to the
structural dynamics of EmrE alters the surrounding lipids within the
bilayer
Intrinsic Conformational Plasticity of Native EmrE Provides a Pathway for Multidrug Resistance
EmrE is a multidrug resistance efflux
pump with specificity to
a wide range of antibiotics and antiseptics. To obtain atomic-scale
insight into the attributes of the native state that encodes the broad
specificity, we used a hybrid of solution and solid-state NMR methods
in lipid bilayers and bicelles. Our results indicate that the native
EmrE dimer oscillates between inward and outward facing structural
conformations at an exchange rate (<i>k</i><sub>ex</sub>) of ∼300 s<sup>–1</sup> at 37 °C (millisecond
motions), which is ∼50-fold faster relative to the tetraÂphenylÂphosphoÂnium
(TPP<sup>+</sup>) substrate-bound form of the protein. These observables
provide quantitative evidence that the rate-limiting step in the TPP<sup>+</sup> transport cycle is not the outward–inward conformational
change in the absence of drug. In addition, using differential scanning
calorimetry, we found that the width of the gel-to-liquid crystalline
phase transition was 2 °C broader in the absence of the TPP<sup>+</sup> substrate versus its presence, which suggested that changes
in transporter dynamics can impact the phase properties of the membrane.
Interestingly, experiments with cross-linked EmrE showed that the
millisecond inward-open to outward-open dynamics was not the culprit
of the broadening. Instead, the calorimetry and NMR data supported
the conclusion that faster time scale structural dynamics (nanosecond–microsecond)
were the source and therefore impart the conformationally plastic
character of native EmrE capable of binding structurally diverse substrates.
These findings provide a clear example how differences in membrane
protein transporter structural dynamics between drug-free and bound
states can have a direct impact on the physical properties of the
lipid bilayer in an allosteric fashion