Output list
Journal article
An improved lysozyme substrate preparation method for the biochemistry kinetics laboratory
Published 10/02/2023
Biophysical journal, 122, 3, 554a - 554a
Journal article
The role of K288A in conformational selection in LeuT
Published 10/02/2023
Biophysical journal, 122, 3, 58a - 58a
Journal article
Conformational dynamics and pH-regulation in ApcT
Published 10/02/2023
Biophysical journal, 122, 3, 33a - 33a
Journal article
Published 10/02/2023
Biophysical journal, 122, 3, 398a - 398a
Journal article
Conformational transitions of the sodium-dependent sugar transporter, vSGLT
Published 05/03/2018
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 115, 12, E2742 - E2751
Sodium-dependent transporters couple the flow of Na+ ions down their electrochemical potential gradient to the uphill transport of various ligands. Many of these transporters share a common core structure composed of a five-helix inverted repeat and deliver their cargo utilizing an alternating-access mechanism. A detailed characterization of inward-facing conformations of the Na+-dependent sugar transporter from Vibrio parahaemolyticus (vSGLT) has previously been reported, but structural details on additional conformations and on how Na+ and ligand influence the equilibrium between other states remains unknown. Here, double electron-electron resonance spectroscopy, structural modeling, and molecular dynamics are utilized to deduce ligand-dependent equilibria shifts of vSGLT in micelles. In the absence and presence of saturating amounts of Na+, vSGLT favors an inward-facing conformation. Upon binding both Na+ and sugar, the equilibrium shifts toward either an outward-facing or occluded conformation. While Na+ alone does not stabilize the outward-facing state, gating charge calculations together with a kinetic model of transport suggest that the resting negative membrane potential of the cell, absent in detergent-solubilized samples, may stabilize vSGLT in an outward-open conformation where it is poised for binding external sugars. In total, these findings provide insights into ligand-induced conformational selection and delineate the transport cycle of vSGLT.
Journal article
Published 01/08/2017
Current opinion in structural biology, 45, 100 - 108
Secondary active transporters couple the uphill translocation of substrates to electrochemical ion gradients. Transporter conformational motion, generically referred to as alternating access, enables a central ligand binding site to change its orientation relative to the membrane. Here we review themes of alternating access and the transduction of ion gradient energy to power this process in the LeuT-fold class of transporters where crystallographic, computational and spectroscopic approaches have converged to yield detailed models of transport cycles. Specifically, we compare findings for the Na+-coupled amino acid transporter LeuT and the Ne-coupled hydantoin transporter Mhpl. Although these studies have illuminated multiple aspects of transporter structures and dynamics, a number of questions remain unresolved that so far hinder understanding transport mechanisms in an energy landscape perspective.
Journal article
Published 16/02/2016
Biophysical journal, 110, 3, 222a - 222a
Journal article
Ligand-Dependent Conformational Cycle of the Na+/Hydantoin Transporter Mhp1
Published 27/01/2015
Biophysical journal, 108, 2, 28a - 29a
Journal article
Published 2015
Methods in enzymology, 564, 349 - 387
A detailed understanding of the functional mechanism of a protein entails the characterization of its energy landscape. Achieving this ambitious goal requires the integration of multiple approaches including determination of high-resolution crystal structures, uncovering conformational sampling under distinct biochemical conditions, characterizing the kinetics and thermodynamics of transitions between functional intermediates using spectroscopic techniques, and interpreting and harmonizing the data into novel computational models. With increasing sophistication in solution-based and ensemble-oriented biophysical approaches such as electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, atomic resolution structural information can be directly linked to conformational sampling in solution. Here, we detail how recent methodological and technological advances in EPR spectroscopy have contributed to the elucidation of membrane protein mechanisms. Furthermore, we aim to assist investigators interested in pursuing EPR studies by providing an introduction to the technique, a primer on experimental design, and a description of the practical considerations of the method toward generating high quality data.
Journal article
Conformational cycle and ion-coupling mechanism of the Na+/hydantoin transporter Mhp1
Published 29/09/2014
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS, 111, 41, 14752 - 14757
Na + -coupled symporters use the cellular Na + gradient to power transport of physiologically important molecules across the lipid membrane. However, the mechanism by which binding and dissociation of Na + drive transport remains undefined. This work investigated the Na + /hydantoin transporter Mhp1, a member of the LeuT-fold class of transporters, to describe the conformations sampled during its transport cycle and elucidate the ligand-induced shifts in its conformational equilibrium. The results of this study suggest that Mhp1 isomerization between inward- and outward-facing conformations are Na + -independent and that coupling to the Na + gradient occurs through modulation of substrate affinity by Na + coordination. A previously unidentified model of Mhp1 transport defined by ligand-independent equilibrium fluctuations emerges from this work, offering a new perspective on Na + -coupled symport in the LeuT-fold. Ion-dependent transporters of the LeuT-fold couple the uptake of physiologically essential molecules to transmembrane ion gradients. Defined by a conserved 5-helix inverted repeat that encodes common principles of ion and substrate binding, the LeuT-fold has been captured in outward-facing, occluded, and inward-facing conformations. However, fundamental questions relating to the structural basis of alternating access and coupling to ion gradients remain unanswered. Here, we used distance measurements between pairs of spin labels to define the conformational cycle of the Na + -coupled hydantoin symporter Mhp1 from Microbacterium liquefaciens . Our results reveal that the inward-facing and outward-facing Mhp1 crystal structures represent sampled intermediate states in solution. Here, we provide a mechanistic context for these structures, mapping them into a model of transport based on ion- and substrate-dependent conformational equilibria. In contrast to the Na + /leucine transporter LeuT, our results suggest that Na + binding at the conserved second Na + binding site does not change the energetics of the inward- and outward-facing conformations of Mhp1. Comparative analysis of ligand-dependent alternating access in LeuT and Mhp1 lead us to propose that different coupling schemes to ion gradients may define distinct conformational mechanisms within the LeuT-fold class.