Affiliation:
1. Microbiology/Membrane Physiology
2. Cell Biology/Molecular Biology
3. Proteom Centrum Tübingen, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Analysis of the genome sequence of
Caulobacter crescentus
predicts 67 TonB-dependent outer membrane proteins. To demonstrate that among them are proteins that transport nutrients other than chelated Fe
3+
and vitamin B
12
—the substrates hitherto known to be transported by TonB-dependent transporters—the outer membrane protein profile of cells grown on different substrates was determined by two-dimensional electrophoresis. Maltose induced the synthesis of a hitherto unknown 99.5-kDa protein, designated here as MalA, encoded by the cc2287 genomic locus. MalA mediated growth on maltodextrins and transported [
14
C]maltodextrins from [
14
C]maltose to [
14
C]maltopentaose. [
14
C]maltose transport showed biphasic kinetics, with a fast initial rate and a slower second rate. The initial transport had a
K
d
of 0.2 μM, while the second transport had a
K
d
of 5 μM. It is proposed that the fast rate reflects binding to MalA and the second rate reflects transport into the cells. Energy depletion of cells by 100 μM carbonyl cyanide 3-chlorophenylhydrazone abolished maltose binding and transport. Deletion of the
malA
gene diminished maltose transport to 1% of the wild-type
malA
strain and impaired transport of the larger maltodextrins. The
malA
mutant was unable to grow on maltodextrins larger than maltotetraose. Deletion of two
C. crescentus
genes homologous to the
exbB exbD
genes of
Escherichia coli
abolished [
14
C]maltodextrin binding and transport and growth on maltodextrins larger than maltotetraose. These mutants also showed impaired growth on Fe
3+
-rhodotorulate as the sole iron source, which provided evidence of energy-coupled transport. Unexpectedly, a deletion mutant of a
tonB
homolog transported maltose at the wild-type rate and grew on all maltodextrins tested. Since Fe
3+
-rhodotorulate served as an iron source for the
tonB
mutant, an additional gene encoding a protein with a TonB function is postulated. Permeation of maltose and maltotriose through the outer membrane of the
C. crescentus malA
mutant was slower than permeation through the outer membrane of an
E. coli lamB
mutant, which suggests a low porin activity in
C. crescentus
. The pores of the
C. crescentus
porins are slightly larger than those of
E. coli
K-12, since maltotetraose supported growth of the
C. crescentus malA
mutant but failed to support growth of the
E. coli lamB
mutant. The data are consistent with the proposal that binding of maltodextrins to MalA requires energy and MalA actively transports maltodextrins with
K
d
values 1,000-fold smaller than those for the LamB porin and 100-fold larger than those for the vitamin B
12
and ferric siderophore outer membrane transporters. MalA is the first example of an outer membrane protein for which an ExbB/ExbD-dependent transport of a nutrient other than iron and vitamin B
12
has been demonstrated.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
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