Phosphatidylethanolamine regulates the function and the structure of LmrP, a bacterial multidrug transporter protein associated to antibiotic resistance

The multidrug transporter LmrP, member of the major facilitator superfamily (MFS), confers L. lactis and recombinant E. coli cells resistance to an array of cytotoxic compounds including antibiotics. LmrP mediates drug extrusion from the plasma membrane by an electrogenic proton/drug exchange reacti...

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Main Author: Hakizimana, Pierre
Other Authors: Raussens, Vincent
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:fr
Published: Universite Libre de Bruxelles 2008
Subjects:
PE
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2013/ULB-DIPOT:oai:dipot.ulb.ac.be:2013/210486
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spelling ndltd-ulb.ac.be-oai-dipot.ulb.ac.be-2013-2104862018-04-11T17:34:45Z info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis info:ulb-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis info:ulb-repo/semantics/openurl/vlink-dissertation Phosphatidylethanolamine regulates the function and the structure of LmrP, a bacterial multidrug transporter protein associated to antibiotic resistance Hakizimana, Pierre Raussens, Vincent Ruysschaert, Jean Marie Droogmans, Louis Frère, Jean-Marie Goormaghtigh, Erik Universite Libre de Bruxelles Université libre de Bruxelles, Faculté des Sciences – Chimie, Bruxelles 2008-09-05 fr The multidrug transporter LmrP, member of the major facilitator superfamily (MFS), confers L. lactis and recombinant E. coli cells resistance to an array of cytotoxic compounds including antibiotics. LmrP mediates drug extrusion from the plasma membrane by an electrogenic proton/drug exchange reaction, whereby a positively charged substrate may move towards the external medium in exchange for two or more protons moving towards the cytoplasm. Recent studies have suggested that MFS transporters require phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) for function and proper topology. However, the specificity of the PE requirement, as well as the contribution of the electrochemical gradient (the driving force of the substrate transport) to this lipid requirement was not addressed. Here we report a new approach for addressing PE specific requirement for the function and the structure of membranes transporters. We used methyl-PE and dimethyl-PE analogs of PE to show that only replacement of the three hydrogens by methyl moieties leads to changes in the biochemical and biophysical properties of the reconstituted protein. This suggests that LmrP does not depend on the bulk properties of the phospholipids tested but solely on the hydrogen bonding ability of the headgroup. We then show that a single point mutation in LmrP, D68C, is sufficient to recapitulate precisely every biochemical and biophysical effect observed when PE is replaced by phosphatidylcholine (PC) ( including energy transfer between the protein tryptophan residues and the lipid headgroups). We conclude that the negatively charged Asp-68 is likely to participate in the interaction with PE and that such interaction is required for proton gradient sensing, substrate binding, and transport. Because Asp-68 belongs to a highly conserved motif in the Major Facilitator Superfamily (which includes LacY and EmrD), this interaction might be a general feature of these transporters that is involved in proton gradient sensing and lipid dependence.<p> Sciences exactes et naturelles Chimie Phospholipids Multidrug resistance Drug resistance in microorganisms Membranes (Biology) Phospholipides Résistance multiple aux médicaments Bactéries pathogènes -- Résistance aux médicaments Membranes (Biologie) PE multidrug transporter MFS transporter protein-lipid interaction 1 v. Doctorat en Sciences info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished local/bictel.ulb.ac.be:ULBetd-08132008-170959 local/ulbcat.ulb.ac.be:827871 http://hdl.handle.net/2013/ULB-DIPOT:oai:dipot.ulb.ac.be:2013/210486 No full-text files
collection NDLTD
language fr
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Sciences exactes et naturelles
Chimie
Phospholipids
Multidrug resistance
Drug resistance in microorganisms
Membranes (Biology)
Phospholipides
Résistance multiple aux médicaments
Bactéries pathogènes -- Résistance aux médicaments
Membranes (Biologie)
PE
multidrug transporter
MFS transporter
protein-lipid interaction
spellingShingle Sciences exactes et naturelles
Chimie
Phospholipids
Multidrug resistance
Drug resistance in microorganisms
Membranes (Biology)
Phospholipides
Résistance multiple aux médicaments
Bactéries pathogènes -- Résistance aux médicaments
Membranes (Biologie)
PE
multidrug transporter
MFS transporter
protein-lipid interaction
Hakizimana, Pierre
Phosphatidylethanolamine regulates the function and the structure of LmrP, a bacterial multidrug transporter protein associated to antibiotic resistance
description The multidrug transporter LmrP, member of the major facilitator superfamily (MFS), confers L. lactis and recombinant E. coli cells resistance to an array of cytotoxic compounds including antibiotics. LmrP mediates drug extrusion from the plasma membrane by an electrogenic proton/drug exchange reaction, whereby a positively charged substrate may move towards the external medium in exchange for two or more protons moving towards the cytoplasm. Recent studies have suggested that MFS transporters require phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) for function and proper topology. However, the specificity of the PE requirement, as well as the contribution of the electrochemical gradient (the driving force of the substrate transport) to this lipid requirement was not addressed. Here we report a new approach for addressing PE specific requirement for the function and the structure of membranes transporters. We used methyl-PE and dimethyl-PE analogs of PE to show that only replacement of the three hydrogens by methyl moieties leads to changes in the biochemical and biophysical properties of the reconstituted protein. This suggests that LmrP does not depend on the bulk properties of the phospholipids tested but solely on the hydrogen bonding ability of the headgroup. We then show that a single point mutation in LmrP, D68C, is sufficient to recapitulate precisely every biochemical and biophysical effect observed when PE is replaced by phosphatidylcholine (PC) ( including energy transfer between the protein tryptophan residues and the lipid headgroups). We conclude that the negatively charged Asp-68 is likely to participate in the interaction with PE and that such interaction is required for proton gradient sensing, substrate binding, and transport. Because Asp-68 belongs to a highly conserved motif in the Major Facilitator Superfamily (which includes LacY and EmrD), this interaction might be a general feature of these transporters that is involved in proton gradient sensing and lipid dependence.<p> === Doctorat en Sciences === info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
author2 Raussens, Vincent
author_facet Raussens, Vincent
Hakizimana, Pierre
author Hakizimana, Pierre
author_sort Hakizimana, Pierre
title Phosphatidylethanolamine regulates the function and the structure of LmrP, a bacterial multidrug transporter protein associated to antibiotic resistance
title_short Phosphatidylethanolamine regulates the function and the structure of LmrP, a bacterial multidrug transporter protein associated to antibiotic resistance
title_full Phosphatidylethanolamine regulates the function and the structure of LmrP, a bacterial multidrug transporter protein associated to antibiotic resistance
title_fullStr Phosphatidylethanolamine regulates the function and the structure of LmrP, a bacterial multidrug transporter protein associated to antibiotic resistance
title_full_unstemmed Phosphatidylethanolamine regulates the function and the structure of LmrP, a bacterial multidrug transporter protein associated to antibiotic resistance
title_sort phosphatidylethanolamine regulates the function and the structure of lmrp, a bacterial multidrug transporter protein associated to antibiotic resistance
publisher Universite Libre de Bruxelles
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2013/ULB-DIPOT:oai:dipot.ulb.ac.be:2013/210486
work_keys_str_mv AT hakizimanapierre phosphatidylethanolamineregulatesthefunctionandthestructureoflmrpabacterialmultidrugtransporterproteinassociatedtoantibioticresistance
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