Reconstitution of a bacterial periplasmic permease in proteoliposomes and demonstration of ATP hydrolysis concomitant with transport.
- 1 September 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 86 (18) , 6953-6957
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.86.18.6953
Abstract
The histidine periplasmic permease of Salmonella typhimurium has been partially purified and reconstituted into proteoliposomes. In this in vitro preparation, transport activity is completely dependent on the presence of all four permease proteins (HisJ, HisQ, HisM, and HisP) and on internal ATP. The reconstituted system shows initial rates of transport that are comparable to those obtained with right-side-out membrane vesicles and it establishes a 100-fold concentration gradient for histidine. Proteoliposomes also transport histidine when GTP replaces ATP. Proteoliposomes do not catalyze significant ATP hydrolysis until histidine transport is initiated by addition of substrate along with HisJ, the water-soluble histidine-binding protein. Both initially and throughout the course of substrate transport there is a concomitant hydrolysis of ATP, with an apparent stoichiometry (ATP/histidine) of 5:1. These experiments demonstrate directly that ATP is the source of energy for periplasmic permeases, thus resolving previous controversies on this topic.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- RECONSTITUTION OF THE HISTIDINE PERIPLASMIC TRANSPORT-SYSTEM IN MEMBRANE-VESICLES - ENERGY COUPLING AND INTERACTION BETWEEN THE BINDING-PROTEIN AND THE MEMBRANE COMPLEX1989
- Reconstitution of periplasmic transport in inside-out membrane vesicles. Energization by ATP.1989
- Identification and localization of the membrane‐associated, ATP‐binding subunit of the oligopeptide permease of Salmonella typhimuriumEuropean Journal of Biochemistry, 1989
- ENERGY COUPLING IN BACTERIAL PERIPLASMIC TRANSPORT-SYSTEMS - STUDIES IN INTACT ESCHERICHIA-COLI-CELLS1989
- Functional reconstitution of prokaryote and eukaryote membrane proteinsArchives of Biochemistry and Biophysics, 1989
- Sequence similarityNature, 1987
- Domainal evolution of a prokaryotic DNA repair protein and its relationship to active-transport proteinsNature, 1986
- A family of related ATP-binding subunits coupled to many distinct biological processes in bacteriaNature, 1986
- Different Mechanisms of Energy Coupling for the Shock-sensitive and Shock-resistant Amino Acid Permeases of Escherichia coliJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1974
- Cleavage of Structural Proteins during the Assembly of the Head of Bacteriophage T4Nature, 1970