The AcrAB-TolC system exports a wide variety of drugs and toxic compounds, and confers intrinsic drug tolerance on Escherichia coli. The crystal structures suggested that AcrB and TolC directly dock with each other. However, biochemical and biophysical evidence of their interaction has been contradictory until recently. In this study, we examine the interaction sites by means of in vivo disulfide cross-linking between cysteine residues introduced by site-directed mutagenesis at the tops of the vertical hairpins of AcrB and the bottoms of the coiled coils of polyhistidine-tagged TolC molecules, which are structurally predicted docking sites. The AcrB-TolC complex formed through disulfide cross-linking was detected when a specific pair of mutants was coexpressed in E. coli. Our observations suggested that the AcrB-TolC complex may be formed through a two-step mechanism via transient tip-to-tip interaction of AcrB and TolC. The cross-linking was not affected by AcrA, the substrate, or a putative proton coupling site mutation.
Bacterial Tn10-encoded metal-tetracycline/H؉ antiporter was the first found drug exporter and has been studied as a paradigm of antiporter-type major facilitator superfamily transporters. Here the 400 amino acid residues of this protein were individually replaced by cysteine except for the initial methionine. As a result, we could obtain a complete map of the functionally or structurally important residues. In addition, we could determine the precise boundaries of all the transmembrane segments on the basis of the reactivity with Nethylmaleimide (NEM). The NEM binding results indicated the presence of a transmembrane water-filled channel in the transporter. The twelve transmembrane segments can be divided into three groups; four are totally embedded in the hydrophobic interior, four face a putative water-filled channel along their full length, and the remaining four face the channel for half their length, the other halves being embedded in the hydrophobic interior. These three types of transmembrane segments are mutually arranged with a 4-fold symmetry. The competitive binding of membrane-permeable and -impermeable SH reagents in intact cells indicates that the transmembrane water-filled channel has a thin barrier against hydrophilic molecules in the middle of the transmembrane region. Inhibition and stimulation of NEM binding in the presence of tetracycline reflects the substrate-induced protection or conformational change of the Tn10-encoded metal-tetracycline/H ؉ antiporter. The mutations protected from NEM binding by tetracycline were mainly located around the permeability barrier in the N-terminal half, suggesting the location of the substrate binding site.
We previously reported the crystal structure of the major multidrug exporter AcrB in Escherichia coli (Murakami, S., Nakashima, R., Yamashita, E., and Yamaguchi, A. (2002) Nature 419, 587-593). The extramembrane headpiece of the AcrB trimer contains a central pore composed of three ␣-helices. Each pore helix belongs to a different monomer. In this study, we constructed cysteine-scanning mutants as to the residues comprising the pore helix. Of the 21 mutants (D99C to P119C), 5 (D101C, V105C, N109C, Q112C, and P116C) showed significantly reduced drug resistance and drug-exporting activity. These residues are localized on one side of the pore helix, i.e. on the wall of the pore. These observations strongly indicate the important role of this pore in the drug transport process. A N-ethylmaleimide binding experiment revealed that the pore is in the closed state, and the thickness of the permeability barrier in the middle of the pore corresponds to 2.5 ␣-helical turns. Two mutants (V105C and Q112C), which showed the greatest loss of activity of all of the pore mutants, were detected in the form of disulfide cross-linking dimers under normal conditions, suggesting that a conformational change of the pore is indispensable during the transport process.
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