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Molecular mechanism of substrate specificity in the bacterial neutral amino acid transporter LeuT
Author(s) -
Noskov Sergei Y.
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
proteins: structure, function, and bioinformatics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.699
H-Index - 191
eISSN - 1097-0134
pISSN - 0887-3585
DOI - 10.1002/prot.22108
Subject(s) - alanine , chemistry , salt bridge , neurotransmitter transporter , molecular dynamics , transporter , leucine , glycine , hydrogen bond , stereochemistry , binding site , amino acid , substrate (aquarium) , crystallography , molecule , biochemistry , computational chemistry , gene , biology , organic chemistry , ecology , mutant
The recently published X‐ray structure of LeuT, a Na + /Cl − ‐dependent neurotransmitter transporter, has provided fresh impetus to efforts directed at understanding the molecular principles governing specific neurotransmitter transport. The combination of the LeuT crystal structure with the results of molecular simulations enables the functional data on specific binding and transport to be related to molecular structure. All‐atom FEP and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of LeuT embedded in an explicit membrane were performed alongside a decomposition analysis to dissect the molecular determinants of the substrate specificity of LeuT. It was found that the ligand must be in a zwitterionic (ZW) form to bind tightly to the transporter. The theoretical results on the absolute binding‐free energies for leucine, alanine, and glycine show that alanine can be a potent substrate for LeuT, although leucine is preferred, which is consistent with the recent experimental data (Singh et al., Nature 2007;448:952–956). Furthermore, LeuT displays robust specificity for leucine over glycine. Interestingly, the ability of LeuT to discriminate between substrates relies on the dynamics of residues that form its binding pocket (e.g., F253 and Q250) and the charged side chains (R30‐D404) from a second coordination shell. The water‐mediated R30‐D404 salt bridge is thought to be part of the extracellular (EC) gate of LeuT. The introduction of a polar ligand such as glycine to the water‐depleted binding pocket of LeuT gives rise to structural rearrangements of the R30‐D404‐Q250 hydrogen‐bonding network and leads to increased hydration of the binding pocket. Conformational changes associated with the broken hydrogen bond between Q250 and R30 are shown to be important for tight and selective ligand binding to LeuT. Proteins 2008. © 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.