1. Substrate-induced Conformational Changes of Extracellular Loop 1 in the Glycine Transporter GLYT2
- Author
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Carmen Aragón, Arjan Geerlings, Rodrigo Martı́nez-Maza, Beatriz López-Corcuera, and Enrique Núñez
- Subjects
Serotonin ,Time Factors ,Synaptic cleft ,Protein Conformation ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Glycine ,Serotonin transport ,Biochemistry ,Substrate Specificity ,Glycine transporter ,Ion binding ,Glycine Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins ,Animals ,Biotinylation ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Molecular Biology ,Serotonin transporter ,Ions ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Sequence Homology, Amino Acid ,biology ,Chemistry ,Sodium ,Temperature ,Biological Transport ,Transporter ,Cell Biology ,Protein Structure, Tertiary ,Amino Acid Transport Systems, Neutral ,COS Cells ,Mutagenesis, Site-Directed ,biology.protein ,Chlorine ,Protein Binding ,Cysteine - Abstract
The neurotransmitter glycine is removed from the synaptic cleft by two Na(+)-and Cl(-)-dependent transporters, the glial (GLYT1) and neuronal (GLYT2) glycine transporters. GLYT2 lacks a conserved cysteine in the first hydrophilic loop (EL1) that is reactive to [2-(trimethylammonium)ethyl] methanethiosulfonate (MTSET) in related transporters. A chimeric GLYT2 (GLYT2a-EL1) that contains GLYT1 sequences in this region, including the relevant cysteine, was sensitive to the reagent, and its sensitivity was decreased by co-substrates. We combined cysteine-specific biotinylation to detect transporter-reagent interactions with MTSET inactivation assays and temperature dependence analysis to study the mechanism by which Cl(-), Na(+), and glycine reduce methanethiosulfonate reagent inhibition. We demonstrate a Na(+) protective effect rather than an increased susceptibility to the reagent exerted by Li(+), as reported for the serotonin transporter. The different inhibition, protection, and reactivation properties between GLYT2a-EL1 and serotonin transporter suggest that EL1 is a source of structural heterogeneity involved in the specific effect of lithium on serotonin transport. The protection by Na(+) or Cl(-) on GLYT2a-EL1 was clearly dependent on temperature, suggesting that EL1 is not involved in ion binding but is subjected to ion-induced conformational changes. Na(+) and Cl(-) were required for glycine protection, indicating the necessity of prior ion interaction with the transporter for the binding of glycine. We conclude that EL1 acts as a fluctuating hinge undergoing sequential conformational changes during the transport cycle.
- Published
- 2001
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