Affiliation:
1. Department of Pharmacology and Biological Chemistry, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York 10029
2. Faculty of Life Sciences, Toyo University, 1-1-1 Izumino, Itakura-machi, Gunma 374-0193, Japan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Monovalent cation proton antiporter-3 (Mrp) family antiporters are widely distributed and physiologically important in prokaryotes. Unlike other antiporters, they require six or seven hydrophobic gene products for full activity. Standard fluorescence-based assays of Mrp antiport in membrane vesicles from
Escherichia coli
transformants have not yielded strong enough signals for characterization of antiport kinetics. Here, an optimized assay protocol for vesicles of antiporter-deficient
E. coli
EP432 transformants produced higher levels of secondary Na
+
(Li
+
)/H
+
antiport than previously reported. Assays were conducted on Mrps from alkaliphilic
Bacillus pseudofirmus
OF4 and
Bacillus subtilis
and the homologous antiporter of
Staphylococcus aureus
(Mnh), all of which exhibited Na
+
(Li
+
)/H
+
antiport. A second paralogue of
S. aureus
(Mnh2) did not. K
+
, Ca
2+
, and Mg
2+
did not support significant antiport by any of the test antiporters. All three Na
+
(Li
+
)/H
+
Mrp antiporters had alkaline pH optima and apparent
K
m
values for Na
+
that are among the lowest reported for bacterial Na
+
/H
+
antiporters. Using a fluorescent probe of the transmembrane electrical potential (ΔΨ), Mrp Na
+
/H
+
antiport was shown to be ΔΨ consuming, from which it is inferred to be electrogenic. These assays also showed that membranes from
E. coli
EP432 expressing Mrp antiporters generated higher ΔΨ levels than control membranes, as did membranes from
E. coli
EP432 expressing plasmid-borne NhaA, the well-characterized electrogenic
E. coli
antiporter. Assays of respiratory chain components in membranes from Mrp and control
E. coli
transformants led to a hypothesis explaining how activity of secondary, ΔΨ-consuming antiporters can elicit increased capacity for ΔΨ generation in a bacterial host.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
45 articles.
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