45 research outputs found

    Structural and functional aspects of the multidrug efflux pump AcrB

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    The tripartite efflux system AcrA/AcrB/TolC is the main pump in Escherichia coli for the efflux of multiple antibiotics, dyes, bile salts and detergents. The inner membrane component AcrB is central to substrate recognition and energy transduction and acts as a proton/drug antiporter. Recent structural studies show that homotrimeric AcrB can adopt different monomer conformations representing consecutive states in an allosteric functional rotation transport cycle. The conformational changes create an alternate access drug transport tunnel including a hydrophobic substrate binding pocket in one of the cycle intermediate

    Structure, mechanism and cooperation of bacterial multidrug transporters.

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    Cells from all domains of life encode energy-dependent trans-membrane transporters that can expel harmful substances including clinically applied therapeutic agents. As a collective body, these transporters perform as a super-system that confers tolerance to an enormous range of harmful compounds and consequently aid survival in hazardous environments. In the Gram-negative bacteria, some of these transporters serve as energy-transducing components of tripartite assemblies that actively efflux drugs and other harmful compounds, as well as deliver virulence agents across the entire cell envelope. We draw together recent structural and functional data to present the current models for the transport mechanisms for the main classes of multi-drug transporters and their higher-order assemblies.BL and DD are supported by the Medical Research Council (MRC), Human Frontiers Science Program (HFSP), and the Wellcome Trust. Work in the Van Veen lab is supported by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC), MRC, HFSP, Royal Society, Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy (BSAC), Herchel Smith Foundation, and Commonwealth Trust. Work in the Pos lab is supported by the German Research Foundation (SFB 807, Transport and Communication across Biological Membranes and FOR2251, Adaptation and persistence of the emerging pathogen Acinetobacter baumannii), the DFG-EXC115 (Cluster of Excellence Macromolecular Complexes at the Goethe-University Frankfurt), Innovative Medicines Initiative Joint Undertaking Project Translocation (IMI-Translocation), EU Marie Curie Actions ITN, HFSP and the German-Israeli Foundation (GIF). The SM laboratory is supported by ERATO Murata Lipid Active Structure Project, Japan Science and Technology Agency, the Advanced Research for Medical Products Mining Program of the National Institute of Biomedical Innovation (NIBIO) and HFSP.This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from Elsevier via http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sbi.2015.07.01

    Structure, Assembly, and Function of Tripartite Efflux and Type 1 Secretion Systems in Gram-Negative Bacteria

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    Tripartite efflux pumps and the related type 1 secretion systems (T1SSs) in Gram-negative organisms are diverse in function, energization, and structural organization. They form continuous conduits spanning both the inner and the outer membrane and are composed of three principal components—the energized inner membrane transporters (belonging to ABC, RND, and MFS families), the outer membrane factor channel-like proteins, and linking the two, the periplasmic adaptor proteins (PAPs), also known as the membrane fusion proteins (MFPs). In this review we summarize the recent advances in understanding of structural biology, function, and regulation of these systems, highlighting the previously undescribed role of PAPs in providing a common architectural scaffold across diverse families of transporters. Despite being built from a limited number of basic structural domains, these complexes present a staggering variety of architectures. While key insights have been derived from the RND transporter systems, a closer inspection of the operation and structural organization of different tripartite systems reveals unexpected analogies between them, including those formed around MFS- and ATP-driven transporters, suggesting that they operate around basic common principles. Based on that we are proposing a new integrated model of PAP-mediated communication within the conformational cycling of tripartite systems, which could be expanded to other types of assemblies

    Multidrug efflux pumps:structure, function and regulation

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    Infections arising from multidrug-resistant pathogenic bacteria are spreading rapidly throughout the world and threaten to become untreatable. The origins of resistance are numerous and complex, but one underlying factor is the capacity of bacteria to rapidly export drugs through the intrinsic activity of efflux pumps. In this Review, we describe recent advances that have increased our understanding of the structures and molecular mechanisms of multidrug efflux pumps in bacteria. Clinical and laboratory data indicate that efflux pumps function not only in the drug extrusion process but also in virulence and the adaptive responses that contribute to antimicrobial resistance during infection. The emerging picture of the structure, function and regulation of efflux pumps suggests opportunities for countering their activities

    Multidrug resistance in hydrocarbon-tolerant Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria

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    Purification, crystallization and preliminary diffraction studies of AcrB, an inner-membrane multi-drug efflux protein

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    Resistance of pathogens to antibiotics is often dependent on multi-drug export proteins that reside in the inner membrane of bacteria. This work describes the expression, purification, crystallization and preliminary crystallographic analysis of AcrB of Escherichia coli. Together with AcrA and TolC, AcrB forms a proton motive force dependent efflux pump of the resistance-nodulation-cell division (RND) transporter superfamily and is responsible for resistance towards many common antibiotics such as ciprofloxacin and novobiocin. AcrB crystallizes in space group R32, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 143, c = 513 A; the crystals diffract to 3.0 A resolution

    Drug Resistance: A Periplasmic MĂ©nage Ă  Trois

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    The paradigm tripartite efflux transporter AcrA-AcrB-TolC confers multiple drug resistance to Escherichia coli. Tikhonova et al. (2011) now examine how the three components connect to unity and highlight the critical role of AcrA membrane proximal domain conformation for successful assembly

    Trinity revealed: Stoichiometric complex assembly of a bacterial multidrug efflux pump

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    Structural and functional aspects of the multidrug efflux pump AcrB

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    The tripartite efflux system AcrA/AcrB/TolC is the main pump in Escherichia coli for the efflux of multiple antibiotics, dyes, bile salts and detergents. The inner membrane component AcrB is central to substrate recognition and energy transduction and acts as a proton/drug antiporter. Recent structural studies show that homotrimeric AcrB can adopt different monomer conformations representing consecutive states in an allosteric functional rotation transport cycle. The conformational changes create an alternate access drug transport tunnel including a hydrophobic substrate binding pocket in one of the cycle intermediate
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