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Journal of Bacteriology, December 2007, p. 9131-9134, Vol. 189, No. 24
0021-9193/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.01492-07
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

School of Biological Sciences, The University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia,1 School of Biological Sciences, Flinders University, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia2
Received 17 September 2007/ Accepted 5 October 2007
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-helical transmembrane segments (TMS) (Fig. 1) (4). The multidrug recognition profile of the QacA transporter is distinct from that of the closely related QacB protein, in that QacA confers high-level resistance to both monovalent and bivalent cationic antimicrobials, whereas QacB provides poor resistance to bivalent cations (9). Previous studies have shown that of the six amino acid differences between QacA and QacB, only one, the incorporation of an aspartic acid residue at position 323 (D323) in TMS 10 of QacA in place of an alanine at this position in QacB, is required to extend the substrate recognition profile of QacA to include bivalent molecules (Fig. 1) (9). In the absence of D323, an acidic residue in one of two other positions in TMS 10, 320 or 322, can also promote bivalent substrate recognition (9, 11). These positions are thought to line the binding site for bivalent cationic drugs in QacA, situating the acidic residues such that they can participate in electrostatic interactions with bivalent substrates (7, 9, 11).
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FIG. 1. Schematic topological representation of the QacA transport protein based on results of hydropathy analysis and limited solvent accessibility studies (11). The TMS are enclosed by gray shaded boxes and are numbered 1 to 14. The locations of D323 and L333 in TMS 10 and G377 in TMS 12 are indicated.
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A study investigating the genetic diversity and distribution of genes encoding QacA/B transport proteins within clinical S. aureus strains from Japan identified three variants which encoded proteins containing no acidic residues in TMS 10 but a glutamic acid residue in place of a glycine at amino acid position 377 (G377E) in TMS 12 (Fig. 1) (3). Due to the unfavorable energetic cost, charged residues are unlikely to be buried within the membrane without conferring a selective advantage on the protein. Therefore, the maintenance of the G377E alteration within three distinct QacA/B variants was intriguing. To investigate whether the properties of the amino acid residue at position 377 could influence the substrate specificity of QacA, the phenotypic effects of acidic and neutral substitutions at this position were determined in the presence of D323 and after its neutralization by cysteine substitution.
Site-directed mutagenesis using the Stratagene QuikChange method was used to incorporate glutamic acid, aspartic acid, glutamine, or cysteine substitutions for G377 in both wild-type QacA and D323C QacA mutant templates (11). Each of the eight mutants was expressed at close to wild-type levels in E. coli DH5
cells, as determined by Western analysis with a QacA-specific antiserum (Table 1). The ability of the mutants to confer resistance to six QacA substrates, selected as representatives from different chemical classes and including both monovalent and bivalent compounds, was examined using MIC analysis. As shown previously (11), the QacA D323C mutant conferred only background levels of resistance to each of the bivalent drugs tested while maintaining wild-type or greater levels of resistance to monovalent substrates (Table 1). Although the rhodamine 6G resistance levels conferred by the D323C-G377C/D/E/Q QacA mutants were lower than those conferred by the D323C mutant, these mutant proteins retained a high overall capacity to confer resistance to monovalent cationic substrates (Table 1). Furthermore, neither of the two neutral amino acid substitutions for G377 in the D323C QacA background (viz., D323C-G377C and D323C-G377Q) caused a significant increase in the overall level of bivalent drug resistance observed, although the level of resistance to dequalinium conferred by these mutants was slightly above background (Table 1). In contrast, the G377E and particularly the G377D amino acid substitutions restored significant levels of dequalinium and chlorhexidine resistance and low levels of pentamidine resistance to strains with the D323C mutant protein (Table 1). Therefore, an acidic residue at amino acid position 377 in TMS 12 can functionally compensate for the absence of an acidic residue in TMS 10 to promote QacA-mediated bivalent drug resistance. Interestingly, the incorporation of G377C/D/E/Q substitutions in wild-type QacA caused a reduction in resistance to the majority of representative compounds (Table 1), suggesting that the amino acid residue at position 377 could be a general influence in determining the QacA multidrug recognition profile.
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TABLE 1. Relative expression and resistance capacities of QacA mutant proteins
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FIG. 2. Transport mediated by mutant QacA proteins. E. coli DH5 cells expressing G377 mutants of QacA D323C (A and C) or wild-type QacA (B and D) were loaded with either 8 µM DAPI (A and B) or 15 µM ethidium (C and D), and efflux was monitored fluorometrically. The curve depicting DAPI efflux mediated by the D323C mutant is partially obscured by the D323C-G377C QacA mutant curve (A). Each assay was conducted in at least duplicate, and results shown are from a representative experiment.
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FIG. 3. Fluorescein maleimide reactivity studies of QacA mutant proteins in the presence of the bivalent substrate DAPI. The L333C (A) and D323A-L333C (B) QacA mutant proteins were reacted with fluorescein maleimide in the presence of 0, 50, 250, and 500 µM DAPI, purified by affinity chromatography, and fractionated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, as previously described (11). The fluorescence associated with each band is shown in the top panels, and the Coomassie blue-stained QacA proteins are shown in the lower panels. The percent reactivity to fluorescein maleimide of the DAPI-treated samples relative to the untreated sample for each mutant is indicated below each band.
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Interestingly, despite restoring a significant overall degree of bivalent cation resistance to the D323C QacA mutant, the level of drug recognition restored by the G377D/E mutations varied for different substrates and was particularly low in the case of pentamidine. Likewise, the ability of the MdfA E26T derivative to recognize different cationic substrates after the incorporation of an acidic residue at position 335 varied; for some cations no recognition was restored (1). This could be a reflection of physical constraints within the drug binding regions of these multidrug transporters. Although there is flexibility in the spatial organization of electrostatic interactions with some substrates, other parts of the binding site may be more rigid and restrict the orientation of subsets of substrates, such as pentamidine in QacA, preventing them from readily assuming stabilizing electrostatic interactions with acidic residues in novel spatial positions. If this is the case, it follows that with a reorganization of the position of important binding determinants, a multidrug transporter could rapidly adapt to bind new substrates which were previously unrecognized due to physical constraints in mediating stabilizing binding interactions. The observation that acidic residues exist in different positions in the bivalent drug binding site in naturally occurring QacA/B variants could be a manifestation of this phenomenon and reflect specific selective forces of different environments.
Published ahead of print on 19 October 2007. ![]()
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