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Structure and mechanism of oxalate transporter OxlT in an oxalate-degrading bacterium in the gut microbiota

Authors :
10314246
60452330
Jaunet-Lahary, Titouan
Shimamura, Tatsuro
Hayashi, Masahiro
Nomura, Norimichi
Hirasawa, Kouta
Shimizu, Tetsuya
Yamashita, Masao
Tsutsumi, Naotaka
Suehiro, Yuta
Kojima, Keiichi
Sudo, Yuki
Tamura, Takashi
Iwanari, Hiroko
Hamakubo, Takao
Iwata, So
Okazaki, Kei-ichi
Hirai, Teruhisa
Yamashita, Atsuko
10314246
60452330
Jaunet-Lahary, Titouan
Shimamura, Tatsuro
Hayashi, Masahiro
Nomura, Norimichi
Hirasawa, Kouta
Shimizu, Tetsuya
Yamashita, Masao
Tsutsumi, Naotaka
Suehiro, Yuta
Kojima, Keiichi
Sudo, Yuki
Tamura, Takashi
Iwanari, Hiroko
Hamakubo, Takao
Iwata, So
Okazaki, Kei-ichi
Hirai, Teruhisa
Yamashita, Atsuko
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

An oxalate-degrading bacterium in the gut microbiota absorbs food-derived oxalate to use this as a carbon and energy source, thereby reducing the risk of kidney stone formation in host animals. The bacterial oxalate transporter OxlT selectively uptakes oxalate from the gut to bacterial cells with a strict discrimination from other nutrient carboxylates. Here, we present crystal structures of oxalate-bound and ligand-free OxlT in two distinct conformations, occluded and outward-facing states. The ligand-binding pocket contains basic residues that form salt bridges with oxalate while preventing the conformational switch to the occluded state without an acidic substrate. The occluded pocket can accommodate oxalate but not larger dicarboxylates, such as metabolic intermediates. The permeation pathways from the pocket are completely blocked by extensive interdomain interactions, which can be opened solely by a flip of a single side chain neighbouring the substrate. This study shows the structural basis underlying metabolic interactions enabling favourable symbiosis.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1458646324
Document Type :
Electronic Resource