The central cytoplasmic loop of the major facilitator superfamily of transport proteins governs efficient membrane insertion
- 4 July 2000
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 97 (16) , 8938-8943
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.140224497
Abstract
Deletion of 5 residues (Delta5) from the central cytoplasmic loop of the lactose permease of Escherichia coli has no significant effect on expression or activity, whereas Delta12 leads to increased rates of permease turnover after membrane insertion and decreased transport activity, and Delta20 abolishes insertion and activity. By expressing Delta12 or Delta20 in two halves, both expression and activity are restored to levels approximating wild type. Replacing deleted residues with random hydrophilic amino acids also leads to full recovery. However, introduction of hydrophobic residues decreases expression and activity in a context-dependent manner. Thus, a minimum length of the central cytoplasmic loop is vital for proper insertion, stability, and efficient transport activity, because of constraints at the cytoplasmic ends of helices VI and VII. Furthermore, the results are consistent with the idea that the middle cytoplasmic loop provides a temporal delay between insertion of the first six helices into the membrane before insertion of the second six helices.Keywords
This publication has 58 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Aqueous Pore through the Translocon Has a Diameter of 40–60 Å during Cotranslational Protein Translocation at the ER MembraneCell, 1997
- FtsY, the Prokaryotic Signal Recognition Particle Receptor Homologue, Is Essential for Biogenesis of Membrane ProteinsJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1997
- Chaperonin-promoted Post-translational Membrane Insertion of a Multispanning Membrane Protein Lactose PermeaseJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1996
- Biogenesis of Polytopic Membrane Proteins: Membrane Segments Assemble within Translocation Channels prior to Membrane IntegrationCell, 1996
- Association between the Amino- and Carboxyl-Terminal Halves of Lactose Permease is Specific and Mediated by Multiple Transmembrane DomainsBiochemistry, 1996
- Role of glycine residues in the structure and function of lactose permease, an Escherichia coli membrane transport proteinBiochemistry, 1995
- Construction and in vivo analysis of new split lactose permeasesFEBS Letters, 1994
- Expression of Lactose Permease in Contiguous Fragments as a Probe for Membrane-Spanning DomainsBiochemistry, 1994
- The N-terminal region of Escherichia coli lactose permease mediates membrane contact of the nascent polypeptide chainEuropean Journal of Biochemistry, 1987
- TheLac carrier protein inEscherichia coliThe Journal of Membrane Biology, 1983