Conformational Change of a Tryptophan Residue in BtuF Facilitates Binding and Transport of Cobinamide by the Vitamin B12 Transporter BtuCD-F


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Date

2017-01-27

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

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Abstract

BtuCD-F is an ABC transporter that mediates cobalamin uptake into Escherichia coli. Early in vivo data suggested that BtuCD-F might also be involved in the uptake of cobinamide, a cobalamin precursor. However, neither was it demonstrated that BtuCD-F indeed transports cobinamide, nor was the structural basis of its recognition known. We synthesized radiolabeled cyano-cobinamide and demonstrated BtuCD-catalyzed in vitro transport, which was ATP- and BtuF-dependent. The crystal structure of cobinamide-bound BtuF revealed a conformational change of a tryptophan residue (W66) in the substrate binding cleft compared to the structure of cobalamin-bound BtuF. High-affinity binding of cobinamide was dependent on W66, because mutation to most other amino acids substantially reduced binding. The structures of three BtuF W66 mutants revealed that tight packing against bound cobinamide was only provided by tryptophan and phenylalanine, in line with the observed binding affinities. In vitro transport rates of cobinamide and cobalamin were not influenced by the substitutions of BtuF W66 under the experimental conditions, indicating that W66 has no critical role in the transport reaction. Our data present the molecular basis of the cobinamide versus cobalamin specificity of BtuCD-F and provide tools for in vitro cobinamide transport and binding assays.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

7

Pages / Article No.

41575

Publisher

Nature

Event

Edition / version

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Date collected

Date created

Subject

X-ray crystallography; Transporters; Protein transport; Membrane proteins; Biocatalysis

Organisational unit

09529 - Korkhov, Volodymyr / Korkhov, Volodymyr check_circle

Notes

Funding

166672 - Structural and mechanistic studies of components of bacterial protein N-glycosylation pathway and of vitamin B12 transport (SNF)

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