4.8 Article

A periplasmic coiled-coil interface underlying ToIC recruitment and the assembly of bacterial drug eff lux pumps

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NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0610160104

关键词

antibiotic resistance; exit duct; membrane proteins; type I export

资金

  1. Wellcome Trust Funding Source: Medline

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Bacteria such as Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa expel antibiotics and other inhibitors via tripartite multidrug efflux pumps spanning the inner and outer membranes and the intervening periplasmic space. A key event in pump assembly is the recruitment of an outer membrane-anchored TolC exit duct by the adaptor protein of a cognate inner membrane translocase, establishing a contiguous transenvelope efflux pore. We describe the underlying interaction of juxtaposed periplasmic exit duct and adaptor coiled-coils in the widespread RND-type pump TolC/AcrAB of E. coli, using in vivo cross-linking to map the extent of intermolecular contacts. Cross-linking of site-specific TolC cysteine variants to wild-type AcrA adaptor identified residues on the lower a-helical barrel domain of TolC, defining a contiguous cluster close to the entrance aperture of the exit duct. Reciprocally, site-specific cross-linking of AcrA cysteine variants to wild-type TolC identified the interaction surface on the adaptor within the N-terminal a-helix of the AcrA coiled-coil. The experimental data allowed a data-driven docking approach to model the interaction surface central to pump assembly. The lowest energy docked model satisfying all of the cross-link distance constraints places the adaptor at the intramolecular groove formed by the TolC entrance helices, aligning the adaptor coiled-coil with the exposed TolC outer helix. A key feature of this positioning is that it allows space for the proposed movement of the inner coil of TolC during transition to its open state.

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