Transporter ProP of Escherichia coli, a member of the major facilitator superfamily (MFS), acts as an osmosensor and an osmoregulator in cells and after purification and reconstitution in proteoliposomes. H(+)-osmoprotectant symport via ProP is activated when medium osmolality is elevated with membrane impermeant osmolytes. The three-dimensional structure of ProP was modeled with the crystal structure of MFS member GlpT as a template. This GlpT structure represents the inward (or cytoplasm)-facing conformation predicted by the alternating access model for transport. LacZ-PhoA fusion analysis and site-directed fluorescence labeling substantiated the membrane topology and orientation predicted by this model and most hydropathy analyses. The model predicts the presence of a proton pathway within the N-terminal six-helix bundle of ProP (as opposed to the corresponding pathway found within the C-terminal helix bundle of its paralogue, LacY). Replacement of residues within the N-terminal helix bundle impaired the osmotic activation of ProP, providing the first indication that residues outside the C-terminal domain are involved in osmosensing. Some residues that were accessible from the periplasmic side, as predicted by the structural model, were more susceptible to covalent labeling in permeabilized membrane fractions than in intact bacteria. These residues may be accessible from the cytoplasmic side in structures not represented by our current model, or their limited exposure in vivo may reflect constraints on transporter structure that are related to its osmosensory mechanism.
Transporter ProP of Escherichia coli is an osmosensor and an osmoprotectant transporter. Previous results suggest that medium osmolality determines the proportions of ProP in active and inactive conformations. A cysteine-less (Cys-less) variant was created and characterized as a basis for structural and functional analyses based on site-directed Cys substitution and chemical labeling of ProP. Parameters describing the osmosensory and osmoprotectant transport activities of Cys-less ProP-(His)(6) variants were examined, including the threshold for osmotic activation and the absolute transporter activity at high osmolality (in both cells and proteoliposomes), the dependence of K(M) and V(max) for proline uptake on osmolality, and the rate constant for transporter activation in response to an osmotic upshift (in cells only). Variant ProP-(His)(6)-C112A-C133A-C264V-C367A (designated ProP) retained similar activities to ProP-(His)(6) in both cells and proteoliposomes. The bulky Val residue was favored over Ala or Ser at position 264, whereas Val strongly impaired function when placed at position 367, highlighting the importance of residues at those positions for osmosensing. In the ProP* background, variants with a single Cys residue at positions 112, 133, 241, 264, 293, or 367 retained full function. The native Cys at positions 112, 133, 264, and 367, predicted to be within transmembrane segments of ProP, were poorly reactive with membrane-impermeant thiol reagents. The reactivities of Cys at positions 241 and 293 were consistent with exposure of those residues on the cytoplasmic and periplasmic surfaces of the cytoplasmic membrane, respectively. These observations are consistent with the topology and orientation of ProP predicted by hydropathy analysis.
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