Publication | Open Access
The mechanism of glucose 6-phosphate transport by Escherichia coli.
66
Citations
32
References
1988
Year
Proteinlipid InteractionEngineeringBacteriologyGlycobiologyEscherichia ColiMicrobial PhysiologySugar Phosphate TransportBiosynthesisBioenergeticsMembrane TransportBiochemical EngineeringInorganic PhosphateBiochemistryUhpt-encoded ProteinMembrane SystemProtein TransportMolecular MicrobiologyMembrane PermeationBiomolecular EngineeringMetabolic PathwaysBiotechnologyProtein EngineeringMicrobiologyMedicine
To evaluate anion exchange as the mechanistic basis of sugar phosphate transport, natural and artificial membranes were used in studies of glucose 6-phosphate (Glc-6-P) and inorganic phosphate (Pi) accumulation by the uhpT-encoded protein (UhpT) of Escherichia coli. Experiments with intact cells demonstrated that UhpT catalyzed the neutral exchange of internal and external Pi, and work with everted as well as right-side-out membrane vesicles showed further that UhpT mediated the heterologous exchange of Pi and Glc-6-P. When loaded with Pi, but not when loaded with morpholinopropanesulfonate (MOPS), everted vesicles took up Glc-6-P to levels 100-fold above medium concentration in a reaction unaffected by the ionophores valinomycin, valinomycin plus nigericin, and carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone. Similarly, right-side-out vesicles were capable of Glc-6-P transport, but only if a suitable internal countersubstrate was available. Thus, in MOPS-loaded vesicles, oxidative metabolism established a proton-motive force that supported proline or Pi accumulation, but transport of Glc-6-P was found only if vesicles could accumulate Pi during a preincubation. After reconstitution of UhpT into proteoliposomes it was possible to show as well that the level of accumulation of Glc-6-P (17 to 560 nmol/mg of protein) was related directly to the internal concentration of Pi. These results are most easily understood if the transport of glucose 6-phosphate in E. coli occurs by anion exchange rather than by nH+/anion support.
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