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A role for C‐terminal cysteines in oligomerization of the Slc26a6 anion transporter
Author(s) -
Li Qinggang,
Babilonia Elisa,
Chang MinHwang,
Kwon Charles,
Mandal Asim,
Mercado Adriana,
Romero Michael F.,
Mount David B.
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
the faseb journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.709
H-Index - 277
eISSN - 1530-6860
pISSN - 0892-6638
DOI - 10.1096/fasebj.24.1_supplement.609.13
Subject(s) - chemistry , cysteine , biochemistry , threonine , serine , immunoprecipitation , phosphorylation , gene , enzyme
The ten‐member SLC26 gene family encodes anion transporters with a diversity of substrates and transport modes, functioning as electrogenic exchangers, anion sensors, and/or anion channels. Slc26a6 is perhaps the most versatile paralog, mediating electrogenic exchange of multiple divalent and monovalent anions. We have generated a cysteineless Slc26a6 for structure‐function studies, fully substituting 8 cysteines with threonine, serine, and alanine, as dictated by the functional data for single and compound mutants. Although absolute transport rates are reduced in the cysteineless Slc26a6 protein it exhibits equivalent anion specificity and electrophysiology (chloride‐bicarbonate exchange) to that of wild‐type. On Western blots, the oligomerization of wild‐type Slc26a6 is inhibited by dithiothreitol, suggesting a role for inter‐cysteine disulfide bonds; oligomerization is absent in the cysteineless protein. Co‐immunoprecipitation of FLAG‐ and MYC‐tagged Slc26a6 is easily detectable for wild‐type proteins but absent in the epitope‐tagged cysteineless proteins. The equivalent data for single and compound mutants implicate C‐terminal cytoplasmic cysteines in oligomerization of the transporter protein. In summary, the eight cysteines in Slc26a6 are dispensable for transport activity but appear to play a role in oligomerization of the transport protein.

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