Elevator mechanism dynamics in a sodium-coupled dicarboxylate transporter

Author:

Kinz-Thompson C.D.ORCID,Lopez-Redondo M.L.,Mulligan C.ORCID,Sauer D.B.ORCID,Marden J.J.ORCID,Song J.,Tajkhorshid E.ORCID,Hunt J.F.ORCID,Stokes D.L.ORCID,Mindell J.A.ORCID,Wang D.NORCID,Gonzalez R.L.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractVcINDY, the sodium-dependent dicarboxylate transporter fromVibrio cholerae, is responsible for C4- and C5-carboxylate uptake into cells. The molecular mechanism of how VcINDY physically moves substrates across the membrane, and does so in an energetically efficient manner, is unclear. Here, we use single-molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer experiments to directly observe the individual mechanistic steps that VcINDY takes to translocate substrates across a lipid bilayer, and then test key predictions of transport cycle mechanistic models. Our data provide the first direct evidence that VcINDY undergoes stochastic, elevator-type conformational motions that enable substrate translocation. Kinetic analysis suggests that the two protomers of the VcINDY homodimer undergo those motions in a non-cooperative manner, and thus catalyze two independent transport reactions. The relative substrate independence of those motions supports the notion that the VcINDY transport cycle maintains strict co-substrate coupling using a cooperative binding mechanism. Finally, thermodynamic modeling provides insight into how such a cooperative binding mechanism provides a generalized approach to optimizing transport for many secondary active transporters.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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