Affiliation:
1. Centro de Neurociências e Biologia Celular, Departamento de Zoologia, Universidade de Coimbra, Coimbra
2. Instituto de Tecnologia Química e Biológica, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Oeiras, Portugal
3. Göttingen Genomics Laboratory, Institut für Mikrobiologie und Genetik, Göttingen
4. Department of Biology, University of Constance, Constance, Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
We have studied the transport of trehalose and maltose in the thernophilic bacterium
Thermus thermophilus
HB27, which grows optimally in the range of 70 to 75°C. The
K
m
values at 70°C were 109 nM for trehalose and 114 nM for maltose; also, a high
K
m
(424 nM) was found for the uptake of sucrose. Competition studies showed that a single transporter recognizes trehalose, maltose, and sucrose, while
d
-galactose,
d
-fucose,
l
-rhamnose,
l
-arabinose, and
d
-mannose were not competitive inhibitors. In the recently published genome of
T. thermophilus
HB27, two gene clusters designated
malEFG
1 (TTC1627 to -1629) and
malEFG
2 (TTC1288 to -1286) and two monocistronic genes designated
malK1
(TTC0211) and
malK2
(TTC0611) are annotated as trehalose/maltose and maltose/maltodextrin transport systems, respectively. To find out whether any of these systems is responsible for the transport of trehalose, the
malE1
and
malE2
genes, lacking the sequence encoding the signal peptides, were expressed in
Escherichia coli
. The binding activity of pure recombinant proteins was analyzed by equilibrium dialysis. MalE1 was able to bind maltose, trehalose, and sucrose but not glucose or maltotetraose (
K
d
values of 103, 67, and 401 nM, respectively). Mutants with disruptions in either
malF1
or
malK1
were unable to grow on maltose, trehalose, sucrose, or palatinose, whereas mutants with disruption in
malK2
or
malF2
showed no growth defect on any of these sugars. Therefore,
malEFG1
encodes the binding protein and the two transmembrane subunits of the trehalose/maltose/sucrose/palatinose ABC transporter, and
malK1
encodes the ATP-binding subunit of this transporter. Despite the presence of an efficient transporter for trehalose, this compound was not used by HB27 for osmoprotection. MalE1 and MalE2 exhibited extremely high thermal stability: melting temperatures of 90°C for MalE1 and 105°C for MalE2 in the presence of 2.3 M guanidinium chloride. The latter protein did not bind any of the sugars examined and is not implicated in a maltose/maltodextrin transport system. This work demonstrates that
malEFG1
and
malK1
constitute the high-affinity ABC transport system of
T. thermophilus
HB27 for trehalose, maltose, sucrose, and palatinose.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
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