8 research outputs found

    A multidrug ABC transporter with a taste for salt.

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    BACKGROUND: LmrA is a multidrug ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter from Lactococcus lactis with no known physiological substrate, which can transport a wide range of chemotherapeutic agents and toxins from the cell. The protein can functionally replace the human homologue ABCB1 (also termed multidrug resistance P-glycoprotein MDR1) in lung fibroblast cells. Even though LmrA mediates ATP-dependent transport, it can use the proton-motive force to transport substrates, such as ethidium bromide, across the membrane by a reversible, H(+)-dependent, secondary-active transport reaction. The mechanism and physiological context of this reaction are not known. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We examined ion transport by LmrA in electrophysiological experiments and in transport studies using radioactive ions and fluorescent ion-selective probes. Here we show that LmrA itself can transport NaCl by a similar secondary-active mechanism as observed for ethidium bromide, by mediating apparent H(+)-Na(+)-Cl(-) symport. Remarkably, LmrA activity significantly enhances survival of high-salt adapted lactococcal cells during ionic downshift. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The observations on H(+)-Na(+)-Cl(-) co-transport substantiate earlier suggestions of H(+)-coupled transport by LmrA, and indicate a novel link between the activity of LmrA and salt stress. Our findings demonstrate the relevance of investigations into the bioenergetics of substrate translocation by ABC transporters for our understanding of fundamental mechanisms in this superfamily. This study represents the first use of electrophysiological techniques to analyze substrate transport by a purified multidrug transporter

    Drug-Lipid A Interactions on the Escherichia coli ABC Transporter MsbA

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    MsbA is an essential ATP-binding cassette half-transporter in the cytoplasmic membrane of the gram-negative Escherichia coli and is required for the export of lipopolysaccharides (LPS) to the outer membrane, most likely by transporting the lipid A core moiety. Consistent with the homology of MsbA to the multidrug transporter LmrA in the gram-positive Lactococcus lactis, our recent work in E. coli suggested that MsbA might interact with multiple drugs. To enable a more detailed analysis of multidrug transport by MsbA in an environment deficient in LPS, we functionally expressed MsbA in L. lactis. MsbA expression conferred an 86-fold increase in resistance to the macrolide erythromycin. A kinetic characterization of MsbA-mediated ethidium and Hoechst 33342 transport revealed apparent single-site kinetics and competitive inhibition of these transport reactions by vinblastine with K(i) values of 16 and 11 μM, respectively. We also detected a simple noncompetitive inhibition of Hoechst 33342 transport by free lipid A with a K(i) of 57 μM, in a similar range as the K(i) for vinblastine, underscoring the relevance of our LPS-less lactococcal model for studies on MsbA-mediated drug transport. These observations demonstrate the ability of heterologously expressed MsbA to interact with free lipid A and multiple drugs in the absence of auxiliary E. coli proteins. Our transport data provide further functional support for direct LPS-MsbA interactions as observed in a recent crystal structure for MsbA from Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (C. L. Reyes and G. Chang, Science 308:1028-1031, 2005)

    LmrA activity enhances cell survival.

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    <p>A, Viability of energized cells (solid bar, LmrA; grey bar, non-expressing control) adapted for 30 min in buffer containing 0.5 M sucrose without or with 100 mM NaCl, 100 mM KCl or 50 mM Na<sub>2</sub>SO<sub>4</sub>, followed by 100-fold dilution into ultrapure water, or in buffer containing 0.125 M sucrose and 25 mM NaCl (control referred to as 4-fold dilution). B, Effect of mutations in LmrA on the viability after dilution of cells pre-exposed to 100 mM NaCl plus 0.5 M sucrose under conditions as in (A). (<i>n</i> = 10)</p

    Ion transport in intact cells.

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    <p>A, Cl<sup>−</sup> efflux in cells preloaded with Na<sup>36</sup>Cl (100 µM) upon the addition of glucose (▪, LmrA; □, non-expressing control; ⧫, EE LmrA; ○, ΔK388 LmrA). B, Effect of the concentration of Na<sup>+</sup>, NMG<sup>+</sup> or Cl<sup>−</sup> on the ATPase activity of purified LmrA (open symbols) or LmrCD (•) measured at 2 mM Mg-ATP. C,D,E, H<sup>+</sup> efflux in energized cells, loaded with pH probe CFDASE to monitor the intracellular pH (pH<sub>in</sub>) in the absence (C) or presence of (D) 0.25 M NaCl or (E) 0.672 M sucrose in the external buffer (each equivalent to 521 mOsm) (▪, LmrA; □, non-expressing control; ⧫, EE LmrA; •, E314A LmrA; ▴, ΔK388 LmrA). Metabolic energy was generated in the cells by the addition of 20 mM glucose (at t = 0 min in the figures), 15 min after the addition of the NaCl or sucrose or solvent control. (<i>n</i> = 8)</p

    Ion-coupled transport in proteoliposomes.

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    <p>A, B, <sup>36</sup>Cl<sup>−</sup> uptake (100 µM) by LmrA-MD (•), E314A LmrA-MD (⋄), EE LmrA-MD (▪) or empty liposomes (▵) in the presence of a Δψ (interior negative) of −120 mV (A) or -ZΔpH (interior alkaline) of −49 mV (B). In the duplicate experiment for LmrA-MD (□) in (B), the addition of uncoupler (valinomycin plus nigericin, 1 µM each) at the arrow resulted in efflux of accumulated <sup>36</sup>Cl<sup>−</sup>, indicating concentrative uptake of the ion. C, ΔpH (interior alkaline)-dependent <sup>36</sup>Cl<sup>−</sup> uptake by LmrA (•), EE LmrA (▪) or empty liposomes (▵). D, ΔpH (interior alkaline)-dependent uptake of non-radioactive Cl<sup>−</sup> (1 mM) by LmrA is observed as a quench in the fluorescence of the SPQ fluorophore trapped in the lumen of the proteoliposomes. Quenching was also observed in empty liposomes (control) in the presence of the Cl<sup>−</sup>/OH<sup>−</sup> antiporter TBT-Cl (1 µM). E, Kinetic analysis of ΔpH (interior alkaline)-dependent <sup>36</sup>Cl<sup>−</sup> uptake by LmrA. F, ΔpH (interior alkaline)-dependent uptake of <sup>22</sup>Na (25 µM) by LmrA-MD. G, Uptake of unlabelled Na<sup>+</sup> (10 mM) by LmrA was detected as an increase in the fluorescence of the membrane-impermeable sodium green probe trapped in the lumen. H, Na<sup>+</sup> (100 µM) stimulates the ΔpH-dependent uptake of <sup>36</sup>Cl<sup>−</sup> (100 µM) by LmrA compared to control containing 99 µM NMG<sup>+</sup> plus 1 µM Na<sup>+</sup>. I, H<sup>+</sup> efflux in proteoliposomes loaded with pH probe BCECF in the presence of an outwardly directed NaCl gradient. Control, empty liposomes. (<i>n</i> = 5)</p
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