All Four Putative Selectivity Filter Glycine Residues in KtrB Are Essential for High Affinity and Selective K+ Uptake by the KtrAB System from Vibrio alginolyticus

The subunit KtrB of bacterial Na+-dependent K+-translocating KtrAB systems belongs to a superfamily of K+ transporters. These proteins contain four repeated domains, each composed of two transmembrane helices connected by a putative pore loop (p-loop). The four p-loops harbor a conserved glycine res...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2005-12, Vol.280 (50), p.41146-41154
Hauptverfasser: Tholema, Nancy, Brüggen, Marc Vor der, Mäser, Pascal, Nakamura, Tatsunosuke, Schroeder, Julian I., Kobayashi, Hiroshi, Uozumi, Nobuyuki, Bakker, Evert P.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The subunit KtrB of bacterial Na+-dependent K+-translocating KtrAB systems belongs to a superfamily of K+ transporters. These proteins contain four repeated domains, each composed of two transmembrane helices connected by a putative pore loop (p-loop). The four p-loops harbor a conserved glycine residue at a position equivalent to a glycine selectivity filter residue in K+ channels. We investigated whether these glycines also form a selectivity filter in KtrB. The single residues Gly70, Gly185, Gly290, and Gly402 from p-loops PA to PD of Vibrio alginolyticus KtrB were replaced with alanine, serine, or aspartate. The three alanine variants KtrBA70, KtrBA185, and KtrBA290 maintained a substantial activity in KtrAB-mediated K+ uptake in Escherichia coli. This activity was associated with a decrease in the affinity for K+ by 2 orders of magnitude, with little effect on Vmax. Minor activities were also observed for three other variants: KtrBA402, KtrBS70, and KtrBD185. With all of these variants, the property of Na+ dependence of K+ transport was preserved. Only the four serine variants mediated Na+ uptake, and these variants differed considerably in their K+/Na+ selectivity. Experiments on cloned ktrB in the pBAD18 vector showed that V. alginolyticus KtrB alone was still active in E. coli. It mediated Na+-independent, slow, high affinity, and mutation-specific K+ uptake as well as K+-independent Na+ uptake. These data demonstrate that KtrB contains a selectivity filter for K+ ions and that all four conserved p-loop glycine residues are part of this filter. They also indicate that the role of KtrA lies in conferring velocity and ion coupling to the Ktr complex.
ISSN:0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M507647200