Cysteine Scanning Mutagenesis of Helix V in the Lactose Permease of Escherichia coli

Abstract
Using a functional lactose permease mutant devoid of Cys (C-less permease), each amino acid residue in putative transmembrane helix V was replaced individually with Cys (from Met145 to Thr163). Of the 19 mutants, 13 are highly functional (60-125% of C-less permease activity), and 4 exhibit lower but significant lactose accumulation (15-45% of C-less permease). Cys replacement of Gly147 or Trp151 essentially inactivates the permease (< 10% of C-less); however, previous studies [Menezes, M. E., Roepe, P. D., & Kaback, H. R. (1990) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 87, 1638; Jung, K., Jung, H., et al. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 1030] demonstrate that neither of these residues is important for activity. Immunoblots reveal that all of the mutant proteins are present in the membrane in amounts comparable to C-less permease with the exception of Trp151-->Cys and single Cys154 permeases which are present in reduced amounts. Finally, only three of the single-Cys mutants are inactivated significantly by N-ethylmaleimide (Met145-->Cys, native Cys148, and Gly159-->Cys), and the positions of the three mutants fall on the same face of helix V.