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Journal of Bacteriology, October 2005, p. 6804-6815, Vol. 187, No. 19
0021-9193/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.187.19.6804-6815.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Julio R. Aires,1,
,
Gerry McDermott,3 and
Hiroshi Nikaido1*
Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720,1 Department of Physics and Astronomy, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa 50011,2 Berkeley Center for Structural Biology, Physical Biosciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 947203
Received 29 April 2005/ Accepted 7 July 2005
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FIG. 1. The structure of the AcrB trimer cocrystallized with ciprofloxacin. The three protomers are shown in blue, mauve, and green, and the ciprofloxacin molecules are shown as CPK models. A. The wild-type AcrB trimer (from PDB file 1OYE). The locations of the "funnel," "pore," and "central cavity" (defined in reference 23) are shown in dotted lines. The entrances to the surface cavities, "depression," and "fissure" (in the latter case, the right-hand entrance as viewed from the outside of the trimer) are shown in continuous lines. B. The N109A mutant AcrB trimer (this study). The figures were drawn with Accelrys Viewer Pro and POV-RAY 3.5.
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This paper documents the binding of various drugs to this new periplasmic site of N109A mutant AcrB and shows by site-directed mutagenesis that alteration of some of the residues at this periplasmic binding site indeed decreases the drug efflux activity of the pump.
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was used for construction and propagation of various plasmid constructs. Cells were grown at 37°C with agitation in Luria-Bertani broth (LB) (Difco) supplemented with ampicillin (100 µg/ml) (Sigma) when necessary. |
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TABLE 1. Strains and plasmids
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or HNCE1b with plasmid DNA was performed by heat shock treatment of competent cells. DNA sequencing was performed on double-stranded DNA templates by the use of universal primers or custom primers (Invitrogen). Nucleotide sequences were determined by Elim Biopharmaceuticals Inc. DNA alignments were obtained by using the BLASTN 2.02 program (3) provided by the National Center for Biotechnology Information. Construction of the N109A mutant acrB gene. The Asn109 residue of E. coli AcrB was changed into Ala by site-directed mutagenesis using a QuikChange kit (Stratagene) with the plasmid pUC151A (17). The mutated gene was sequenced completely to make certain that no other mutations were introduced during the PCR.
Purification of AcrB. The native AcrB and N109A mutant AcrB proteins (both without "tags") were purified following procedures similar to those described earlier (47, 49).
The N109A mutant AcrB was overproduced in E. coli C43(DE3) cells (21) by the use of the plasmid derived from pUC151A. Cells were grown in 10 liters of LB medium with 100 µg/ml ampicillin. Cells were disrupted with a French pressure cell. The membrane was collected and washed twice with high-salt buffer containing 20 mM sodium phosphate (pH 7.2), 2 M KCl, 10% glycerol, 1 mM EDTA, and 1 mM phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride and once with 20 mM HEPES-NaOH buffer (pH 7.5) containing 1 mM phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride. The purified membrane protein was solubilized in 1% (wt/vol) N-dodecyl-ß-D-maltoside. Insoluble materials were removed by ultracentrifugation at 370,000 x g. The extracted protein was purified with hydroxyapatite, Cu2+ affinity (49), and G-200 sizing columns.
Crystallography. Liganded AcrB crystals were grown by cocrystallization with ligands as described earlier (48). Thus, crystals of the N109A mutant were grown by sitting-drop vapor diffusion at 25°C. A protein solution containing 24 mg/ml N109A protein in 20 mM Tris (pH 8.0)-0.1% N-dodecyl-ß-D-maltoside-20 mM dithiothreitol was mixed with an equal volume of a reservoir solution containing 8 to 10% polyethyleneglycol 3000, 40 mM potassium citrate (pH 6.5), and 10% glycerol. To ensure that more than one ligand molecule would bind to the transporter, the ligand-to-protein (trimer) molar ratio in all complex-crystal drops was set to 2:1. This corresponds to a total ligand concentration of about 120 µM. Crystals appeared in the drops within 4 days. Cryoprotection was achieved by raising the glycerol concentration stepwise up to 35% with a 5% increment in each step.
All X-ray intensity data sets were collected at the Advanced Light Source (Beamline 8.2.2) at a cryogenic temperature (100°K). The diffraction data were processed with DENZO and scaled with SCALEPACK (30). The crystals of the N109A mutant took the R32 space group with unit cell dimensions listed in Table 1. Initially, the overall structures of the N109A mutant were determined by molecular replacement using a MolRep program (43) in the CCP4 package. The wild-type AcrB structure (1OY6) with residues 7 to 498, 513 to 710, 712 to 859, and 869 to 1,036 was used as a search model. Before refinement, 5% of all data were set aside for cross-validation (4). The model refinements were performed using the program Refmac (26) in the CCP4 package, and model rebuilding was conducted using the program O (12).
Construction of plasmid pAcrAB. Oligonucleotide primers engineered with SalI and SmaI restriction sites were used to amplify, by PCR, the acrA wild-type gene under standard conditions using Pfu Ultra (Stratagene). The amplified DNA was purified, digested sequentially by SalI and SmaI restriction enzymes (New England Biolabs Inc.), and ligated into a similarly digested pAcrB plasmid (8) so that the acrA gene would be located upstream of acrB, with an intergenic distance of 30 nucleotides, and so that both genes would be under the control of the lac promoter of vector pSport1.
Site-specific mutagenesis.
Point mutations were introduced into the acrB gene carried by plasmid pAcrB by the use of sense and antisense mutagenic primers in a one-step PCR procedure. Approximately 10 to 20 ng of plasmid DNA from E. coli served as the template for PCRs. The PCR mixture was composed of 1 µM of each primer, 6% dimethyl sulfoxide, each deoxynucleoside triphosphate at a concentration of 250 µM in 1x PCR buffer, and 1.25 U of Pfu DNA polymerase (Stratagene) in a final volume of 50 µl. The PCR program was 1 min at 95°C followed by 20 cycles of 30 s at 94°C, 30 s at 45°C, and 8 min at 68°C and an 8-min final extension at 68°C. Then, the PCR product was treated with DpnI restriction enzyme (New England Biolabs Inc.) to digest template DNA and to allow the enrichment of newly synthesized DNA containing the desired mutation. The digested DNA was used for transformation of E. coli strains DH5
by the cold CaCl2 procedure (33). Plasmid DNA was extracted, sequenced to ensure the presence of the desired mutation. The intact acrA gene was then inserted ahead of the mutated acrB gene to produce pAcrAB-like plasmids, which were used for trans complementation of strain HNCE1b.
Drug susceptibility assays. The susceptibilities to antimicrobial agents of E. coli strains (inoculum, 500 cells/ml) harboring pAcrAB-derived plasmids were determined by the twofold dilution method with LB agar medium containing 0.1 mM IPTG (isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside). Bacterial growth was examined after 18 to 24 h at 37°C. Each assay was repeated at least five times to ensure the reproducibility of the results.
Accumulation assay. Cells were grown overnight at 37°C, diluted 100-fold in LB, and grown 1 h before the addition of 0.1 mM IPTG. When the cell suspension optical density at 600 nm reached 0.7 to 0.9, cells were harvested at 5,000 x g for 10 min at room temperature, washed once with 50 mM sodium phosphate buffer (pH 7.2), and resuspended in the same buffer at a cell optical density at 600 nm of 0.4. The accumulation of ethidium bromide was assayed as described by Li et al. (16).
Analysis of AcrA and AcrB expression levels. Exponential-phase cells grown in LB were harvested, resuspended in 50 mM sodium phosphate buffer (pH 7.2), and broken by sonication. Unbroken cells were removed by centrifugation at 10,000 x g for 10 min. Total membrane extract was collected by ultracentrifugation at 100,000 x g for 30 min at 4°C. Proteins were resolved in sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-7.5% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Alternatively, proteins were transferred electrophoretically to nitrocellulose membrane (Bio-Rad) in Tris base (20 mM)-glycine (150 mM)-methanol (20%) for Western blot analysis. Binding of primary polyclonal antibody anti-AcrA or anti-AcrB (49) was detected with an alkaline phosphate-conjugated anti-rabbit secondary antibody (Sigma). Protein visualization was performed with nitroblue tetrazolium and 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl phosphate (5).
Protein structure accession numbers. The coordinates for the protein structures have been deposited in the Protein Data Bank (PDB) as 1T9T (N109A mutant apoprotein), 1T9U (N109A-ciprofloxacin complex), 1T9V (N109A-rhodamine 6G complex), 1T9W (N109A-nafcillin complex), 1T9X (N109A-ethidium complex), and 1T9Y (N109A-Phe-Arg-ß-naphthylamide complex).
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TABLE 2. Effect of amino acid substitutions in AcrB pump on MIC profiles in HNCE1b expressing AcrA and AcrB from pAcrAB-derived plasmidsa
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TABLE 3. Data collection and crystallographic analysis
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FIG. 2. Overlay of the backbones of N109A (unliganded) and wild-type AcrB (unliganded) proteins. The model of the unliganded N109A AcrB (this work) was overlaid on the model of unliganded wild-type AcrB determined by Murakami et al. (23), using the "magic fit" function of the DeepView program, and the N109A structure was colored in rainbow colors; red shows the largest deviation and blue the smallest deviation from the reference, wild-type AcrB structure. The A109 residue is shown as a red stick model (arrow). The reference structure is not shown. The deviation at the N-terminal end of TM8 is about 1 Å, which gradually increases to about 2.5 Å at the end of TM12. Although these values are small in comparison with the resolution of the structure, they appear to be significant, because many consecutive residues show a consistent pattern. The figure was created with DeepView and POV-RAY 3.5.
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FIG. 3. Simulated annealing omit maps of bound Cip (top) and R6G (bottom) molecules in the central cavity (left) and at the periplasmic binding pocket (right). The electron density omit map (contoured at 1.5 ) was calculated with a starting temperature of 2,000°K and by excluding the bound ligand from the model.
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FIG. 4. The periplasmic drug-binding pocket with five ligands. This is a composite figure showing the locations of the ligands in the periplasmic domain. The view is from the outside into the center of the trimer, with the transmembrane domain at the bottom. The ligands shown in stick models are Cip (gray), Et (orange), R6G (red), Naf (yellow), and MC (blue). The portion of the protein constituting the binding pocket (discussed in the text) is in deep blue. This figure and the following three figures were drawn with PyMol (W. L. Delano, PyMol Graphic System [www.pymol.org]).
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FIG. 5. Interaction of Cip with amino acid side chains in the periplasmic binding pocket of the N109A mutant AcrB. Amino acid residues that are within 6 Å of any atoms of the ligand are shown.
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Similar interactions often involving the same set of residues appear to occur with the binding of R6G and Et in our model (not shown). Surprisingly, no acidic residue that would neutralize the positive charges of these dyes was found within 6 Å of the ligand (except Asp566, which is close to the benzoic acid moiety of R6G but more than 11 Å away from its amine nitrogens), although the partially negative
-electron cloud of the phenyl ring of Phe664 is about 4 E from these dyes. The charged atoms may also interact with the backbone oxygens (possibly of Leu828, Gly829, and Ser715), as well as the side chain oxygens of some residues (possibly Ser715 and Gln830). Interestingly, positive charges of pentamidine were recently found to interact exclusively with partial negative charges of oxygens in the backbone and the hydroxyl groups in the side chains in the regulatory protein QacR (25).
Compared with the binding of Cip, R6G, and Et, the binding of a negatively charged antibiotic, Naf, seemed to involve more electrostatic interactions in our model (not shown). Phe664 is the only hydrophobic residue close to the ligand. One of the partially positively charged hydrogen atoms of the phenyl ring of this residue is very close to the sulfur atom in the penicillin nucleus. The other drug-protein interactions also appear largely electrostatic or dipolar. The carboxylate group of the penicillin nucleus of Naf appears to interact with the backbone nitrogen of Gly720 as well as the side chain amide nitrogen of Gln577. These are reminiscent of the neutralization of ligand charges by formally uncharged atoms mentioned above. The carbonyl oxygen of the ß-lactam ring is not far from the backbone nitrogens of Pro718 and Asn719.
In the binding of the inhibitor, MC, Phe664, and Arg717 appear to provide hydrophobic contacts to the naphthylamide and phenylalanine moieties, respectively, of MC. Again it is surprising that there are no acidic residues near this ligand with two positive charges, and participation of backbone oxygens (for example, those of Pro718 and Leu828) may be involved. The amino nitrogen of the Phe residue of MC is also not far from the side chain oxygen of Ser715. Possibly the guanidium group of the Arg residue in MC interacts with the
-electron cloud of the naphthylamide moiety within MC. Coupled with the inhibitor binding in the periplasmic domain is an outward movement of residues 650 to 659 located in the
-helix (C
3 of reference 23) preceding the substrate-binding loop of residues 663 to 676. This shift is apparently caused by the 10-degree rotation (or partial melting) of a large portion of this helix. The movement is significant, with the Gln657
-carbon moving 3.6 Å and some of the side chain atoms moving nearly 8 Å. We suspect that the movement of these residues, which is not seen in the other ligand complexes, may contribute to the inhibition of the transporter activity.
Drug binding to the central cavity. Drug molecules are also bound to the central cavity. However, for those ligands previously examined for their interaction with the wild-type AcrB protein (48), including R6G, Et, and Cip, the positions of binding appeared to be somewhat different from those seen earlier, although the significance of this difference is made somewhat unclear by the limited resolution of our crystals. Thus, these ligands, as well as Naf and MC, seem to bind close to the center of the cavity-lining wall of each protomer, in contrast to the position between protomers in the wild-type protein (Fig. 6; also compare Fig. 1B with Fig. 1A). In other words, most ligands are located close to the top of TM helices 5 and 6, although R6G and MC appear to bind to the location somewhat to the left of the others (as viewed in Fig. 6, from the center of the cavity), involving more strongly the participation of residues at the end of TM helix 3 (such as F386 and F388).
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FIG. 6. The wall of the central cavity with five ligands. This is a composite figure showing the locations of the bound ligands in the central cavity. The view is from the center of the cavity toward the wall, with the periplasmic domain at the top. The ligands are shown in stick models in the same colors as in Fig. 3: thus, Cip (gray), Et (orange), R6G (red), Naf (yellow), and MC (blue).
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FIG. 7. Interaction of Cip with amino acid side chains in the central cavity of the N109A mutant AcrB. Amino acid residues within 6 Å of any atoms of Cip (in gray) are shown in green.
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3 Å apart from one another, indicating that these ligands interact strongly with each other. For the inhibitor MC (not shown), Phe386 appears to provide hydrophobic contact. The three MC molecules also appear to interact strongly with each other here, as each of them is separated by only about 5 Å from the others. In our model, the MC molecules appear to be stretched vertically, in contrast to the highly bent conformation found in the periplasmic binding site. MIC determination in strains with plasmid-driven expression of AcrB. To confirm that the ligand binding observed had functional significance, we mutated the residues near the ligand-binding sites and measured MICs in strains expressing these site-directed mutants of AcrB. Initial studies were carried out with recombinant plasmids containing only the mutated acrB genes. These experiments, however, often gave nonreproducible results. Overexpression of AcrB alone, without the parallel overexpression of AcrA, apparently often leads to variable drug susceptibility patterns, possibly because of the misfolding of the membrane protein, AcrB (H. I. Zgurskaya, personal communication; O. Lomovskaya, personal communication). To avoid these complications, in the following experiments we always used recombinant plasmids expressing both AcrA and AcrB from the same promoter, a strategy pioneered by other laboratories (for an example, see reference 40).
Mutations in the periplasmic domain of AcrB.
As described earlier, the mutant N109A protein produced nearly wild-type levels of resistance to most inhibitors, except tetracycline, acriflavine, and SDS (Table 2), when expressed together with AcrB in the
acrA::cat
acrB::kan
acrD host strain HNCE1b. Thus, the mutant transporter was largely functional. These results can be compared with the recent study (24) of the function of N109C mutant AcrB, which reported that the resistance to tetracycline and acriflavine was decreased. With the N109C mutant, however, decreased resistance to erythromycin and unaltered resistance to SDS are reported; it is unclear whether this difference between N109A and N109C is related to the spontaneous disulfide cross-linking between protomers seen in the latter mutant (24).
We converted into alanine those residues that appear to be close (usually within 6 Å) to the ligands in the structural models. These include D566, which forms the "bottom" (i.e., the end closest to the membrane surface) of the binding pocket, as well as F664 and F666, which are parts of a periplasmic loop that connects the AcrB PC1 and PC2 domains and form the "right" wall of the pocket (viewed from outside the trimer as in Fig. 4), and S715 and R717, which form the "left" wall. We also included E673, which is close to the bottom of the pocket, although it seems somewhat more distant from the ligands in our model. Finally, as a control, we mutated W859, which is located in the periplasmic domain in the cß15 segment preceding TM8 but outside the binding pocket. Most of the mutations were generated in the background of both the wild-type acrB gene and the N109A mutant acrB. We compared the resistance levels caused by the various double-mutant proteins with those generated by the parent, single mutant N109A. As seen in Table 2, conversion of these residues to alanine strongly decreased the resistance to various agents compared with the results seen with the N109A parent protein except D566 and S715. With many mutations (see F664, F666, and E673) resistance to practically all of the agents was compromised, whereas with R717 a strong effect was seen only with novobiocin. These results suggest strongly that the residues surrounding this periplasmic binding site are required for the transport, and presumably the binding, of substrates, at least in the N109A mutant AcrB transporter. We note that all of these mutant proteins were produced at levels close to that of the parent proteins (Fig. 8A). Although there were small variations in the level of expression, these are not expected to produce large (fourfold or larger) differences in MIC as noted in Table 2, because calculations using the parameters derived in reference 38 indicate that decreasing tetracycline MIC from 8 to 2 µg/ml requires the loss of more than 80% of the transporter if its specific activity is unaltered.
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FIG. 8. Western blot analysis of the expression of AcrA and the mutant AcrB proteins. Total protein extracts of E. coli HNCE1b ( acrA::cat acrB::kan acrD) harboring the different plasmid constructs based on plasmid pAcrAB were separated by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (7.5% gel) and probed with polyclonal anti-AcrA antibodies (lower panels) or with polyclonal anti-AcrB antibodies (upper panels). Panels A and B show different sets of mutants; for example, the left part of panel A shows mostly double mutants containing N109A.
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Site-directed mutagenesis of the AcrB central cavity phenylalanine residues F386, F388, F458, and F459. The wild-type AcrB crystal structure in the presence of four different substrates (R6G, Et, dequalinium [Dq], and Cip) (48) suggested that residues F386, F388, F458 and F459 may be involved in drug binding. We examined the role of these residues, which are located at the wall of the upper part of the central cavity, by converting them into alanine.
All of the single substitutions resulted in transporters that retained most of the activity towards the tested molecules (Table 2, footnote b), although twofold decreases in MICs were frequently seen for tetracycline, erythromycin, Dq, and acriflavine. These decreases are likely to be significant, as the MIC determination was repeated at least five times and reproducible values were obtained. Similar results were obtained with double substitutions F386A/F388A or F458A/F459A (Table 2, footnote b). However, with the quadruple-substitution mutant F386A/F388A/F458A/F459A, there was a fourfold decrease in resistance to taurocholate and acriflavine (Table 2). As shown in Fig. 8A, Western blot analysis showed that all the mutant proteins were expressed at levels comparable to that of the wild-type proteins expressed by pAcrAB (Table 1).
Mutation of the charged residues K29 and D101. Charged residues are known to play an important role among multidrug transporters. Residue K29, located close to the internal end of the vestibule, was found within 6 Å of the ligands R6G and Cip (48). Substitution of residue K29 with the neutral residue alanine resulted in a significant decrease in resistance to acriflavine and a small, but probably significant, twofold decrease in MICs of novobiocin, tetracycline, erythromycin, Et, and Dq (Table 2).
We (48) pointed out the possible electrostatic interaction for the dicationic disinfectant Dq with the acidic amino acid residue D101, located in the ceiling of the AcrB central cavity. As shown in Table 2, when D101 was replaced with the neutral amino acid alanine it caused only a modest, twofold reduction in Dq MIC. There was also a small decrease in the MIC of novobiocin and erythromycin. However, the strain expressing this mutant AcrB showed increased susceptibility to acriflavine and tetracycline. The latter results are consistent with a recent report (24) of a study in which the authors replaced residue D101 with the uncharged amino acid cysteine and found decreased MICs of acriflavine, tetracycline, chloramphenicol, and erythromycin. Western blot analysis showed that D101A and K29A mutant proteins were expressed at levels comparable to that of the wild-type AcrB (Fig. 8). Although charged residues within the TM helices are known to be crucial in drug efflux (1, 10), these results suggest that such residues outside the TM helices may also play significant roles in the efflux process, presumably in ligand-binding step(s).
Et accumulation assay.
To confirm the MIC results, we examined the intracellular accumulation of Et into intact cells expressing various constructs of AcrB. While the
acrA::cat
acrB::kan
acrD E. coli strain HNCE1b (pAcrB) rapidly accumulated Et owing to the virtual absence of its active efflux, HNCE1b strain trans-complemented with the wild-type acrAB genes (plasmid pAcrAB) showed a much slower accumulation, presumably as a result of efflux (Fig. 9). As expected, strains expressing mutant AcrB proteins with substitutions F664A/N109A (Fig. 9B) and F666A/N109A (Fig. 9A) showed higher rates of Et accumulation compared to that with the wild-type AcrB, while strains with AcrB containing single substitution F664A or F666A accumulated the dye somewhat less rapidly. These results show that alterations of F664 or F666 in the periplasmic binding site decrease the Et pumping activity of AcrB and that this defect becomes even more serious when an N109A mutation exists in the background.
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FIG. 9. Et accumulation by intact cells of E. coli HNCE1b expressing various versions of AcrB protein together with the wild-type AcrA (except cells containing pAcrB). Cells were grown in LB, induced with 0.1 mM of IPTG for 1 h, harvested, washed, and resuspended in phosphate buffer as described in Materials and Methods. Accumulation time course was monitored with a spectrofluorometer. Et was used at a final concentration of 5 µM. Panel A shows AcrB mutants containing the F666A mutation; Panel B shows those containing the F664A mutation.
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Drug binding to the periplasmic site seems to involve a larger number of amino acid side chains (Fig. 5), in comparison with the binding to the central cavity of the wild-type AcrB (48). Furthermore, there are likely electrostatic interactions between the atoms of ligands and the protein atoms. Yet the binding pocket is quite loose. Similar expansive binding pockets and loose binding have been reported earlier for regulators of multidrug transport protein expression, based on X-ray structures with good resolution (34, 35, 51). For example, in the Et complex of the QacR protein (PDB file 1JTY) (34), only two atoms of the protein are within 3 Å of any atom of the ligand, and substantial portions of the aromatic rings of tyrosine and phenylalanine residues that sandwich the ligand are 5 to 6 Å away from the ligand, a situation similar to that found in this work. Neyfakh (27) argued persuasively that the tight binding of hydrophilic ligands is required only because of the energy needed to remove such ligands from the extensively H-bonded environment of water and that such tight binding is not needed for lipophilic ligands, because no such energy is needed to remove them from water.
In the central cavity, the positions of binding often appeared to be somewhat different from those seen in the wild-type AcrB (48). The extensive nature of binding sites for lipophilic ligands is often known to lead to the situation where a single ligand can bind in multiple positions or orientations. This was found for example with the pig odorant binding protein (45) and PXR xenobiotic resistance regulator (46). There are also data suggesting the presence of multiple ligand-binding sites in various multidrug resistance transporters (6, 14, 22, 31, 36, 44). Our finding of drug binding to different positions in the central cavity in the wild-type and the mutant AcrB and the inability to abolish activity by single (or even double) mutations also seem to emphasize the flexibility of substrate binding sites within this huge, possibly composite (47) space.
Site-directed mutagenesis data suggest a functional role for the periplasmic site. We showed in this study that the conversion, into alanine, of some of the residues surrounding the bound ligands in the periplasmic sites, such as F664, F666, and E673, made the AcrB pump less efficient with most substrates. Importantly, the same mutations also decreased the activity of the AcrB protein without the background N109A mutation, although the range of substrates affected became somewhat more limited (Table 2). These results suggest strongly that the periplasmic binding site newly discovered by the crystallographic study of N109A AcrB transporter is physiologically relevant, not only in the N109A mutant protein but also in the wild-type AcrB.
As with any site-directed mutagenesis study, we cannot exclude formally the possibility that the conversion of these residues into alanine affected the activity because of alteration of protein conformation rather than its direct effect on ligand binding. This seems unlikely, because transporter structures are amazingly flexible; for example, the complete cysteine mutagenesis of the lactose transporter LacY uncovered only 6 residues that were essential out of more than 400 residues (13). Furthermore, side chains of most of the residues altered in this study, both in the central cavity and in the periplasmic pocket, are extending out into hollow spaces in the apoprotein structure (23, 48) and are therefore unlikely to affect the global conformation of the protein. Nevertheless, we are currently trying to examine ligand binding kinetics to settle this issue in an unambiguous manner.
Implications for the substrate export pathway. Since the binding of the drugs to the periplasmic site was seen only with the N109A mutant AcrB, its physiological relevance may be questioned. However, this second site is likely to participate in the normal pathway of substrate transport for the following reasons. (i) As discussed above, site-directed mutagenesis of the residues involved in the periplasmic binding decreased the MIC of various ligands. (ii) Mao et al. (19) isolated spontaneous mutants of P. aeruginosa MexD (a close homolog of AcrB) that acquired the ability to extrude dianionic ß-lactams. Some of the mutants have amino acid substitutions right in the area of the periplasmic binding site, including N673T, which corresponds to Thr676 in AcrB, at the lower end of the substrate binding pocket (Fig. 5), as well as E89K, corresponding to Gln89 in AcrB, at the bottom of the periplasmic depression. Furthermore, random mutagenesis of P. aeruginosa MexB, an AcrB homolog, showed that R716H mutation alters the substrate specificity (20); this residue corresponds to Arg717 of AcrB, that seems to play a major role in the periplasmic binding (Fig. 5). The contribution of the periplasmic binding site to the normal export pathway is also consistent with the earlier genetic data mentioned above, showing that the substrate specificity of the RND pumps is determined largely by the periplasmic domain.
Our current data, however, do not allow us to conclude whether the two binding sites function sequentially or concomitantly. In the former case, we favor the hypothesis that the periplasmic binding occurs after the initial binding of ligands to the central cavity, because the periplasmic binding seems to be somewhat tighter than the binding to the central cavity. Possibly the slightly altered conformation of the N109A mutant transporter mimics one of the transient conformations of AcrB during drug transport, and the periplasmic binding in the N109A AcrB thus may mimic the ligand-binding step that occurs after the binding to the central cavity (48). It is not known how the ligands would travel between the central cavity and the periplasmic depression area. However, the periplasmic domain contains, in addition to the various cavities already mentioned, a possible passageway that we call a "fissure" (Fig. 1A) between the C-terminal loop domain on the outside and the N-terminal loop domain on the inside (23); possibly the ligands may migrate through these fissures. This is suggested by the mutant studies of Mao et al. (19), which also identified several residues at the entrance of the fissure as those affecting the substrate specificity of MexD, an AcrB homolog. We suspect that the fissure area may open up more when a drug molecule moves from the central cavity to periplasmic pocket. Alternatively, the substrates may not move between the two sites, and the simultaneous occupancy of the two sites may be necessary to activate the pump. In the mammalian P-glycoprotein, evidence suggests that there is an allosteric modulator-binding site that is separate from (but possibly overlaps) the two substrate-binding sites (6). In any case, these models are entirely speculative at present and there are no data that exclude other models (for example, ligand export through the central pore, as advocated by another laboratory) (24).
We thank Tom Alber and R. G. Brennan for their criticism concerning the manuscript at various stages of its writing.
E.W.Y. and J.R.A. contributed equally to this study. ![]()
Present address: Faculté des Sciences Pharmaceutiques et Biologiques, Laboratoire de Microbiologie, 4 Avenue de l'Observatoire, 75270 Paris Cedex 06, France. ![]()
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