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3DHX

Crystal structure of isolated C2 domain of the methionine uptake transporter

Summary for 3DHX
Entry DOI10.2210/pdb3dhx/pdb
Related3DHW
DescriptorMethionine import ATP-binding protein metN, IODIDE ION (3 entities in total)
Functional Keywordsmethionine uptake, regulation, amino-acid transport, atp-binding, hydrolase, inner membrane, membrane, nucleotide-binding, transport
Biological sourceEscherichia coli
Cellular locationCell inner membrane; Peripheral membrane protein (By similarity): P30750
Total number of polymer chains2
Total formula weight25864.10
Authors
Johnson, E.,Kaiser, J.T.,Lee, A.T.,Rees, D.C. (deposition date: 2008-06-18, release date: 2008-08-05, Last modification date: 2024-02-21)
Primary citationKadaba, N.S.,Kaiser, J.T.,Johnson, E.,Lee, A.,Rees, D.C.
The high-affinity E. coli methionine ABC transporter: structure and allosteric regulation.
Science, 321:250-253, 2008
Cited by
PubMed Abstract: The crystal structure of the high-affinity Escherichia coli MetNI methionine uptake transporter, a member of the adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-binding cassette (ABC) family, has been solved to 3.7 angstrom resolution. The overall architecture of MetNI reveals two copies of the adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) MetN in complex with two copies of the transmembrane domain MetI, with the transporter adopting an inward-facing conformation exhibiting widely separated nucleotide binding domains. Each MetI subunit is organized around a core of five transmembrane helices that correspond to a subset of the helices observed in the larger membrane-spanning subunits of the molybdate (ModBC) and maltose (MalFGK) ABC transporters. In addition to the conserved nucleotide binding domain of the ABC family, MetN contains a carboxyl-terminal extension with a ferredoxin-like fold previously assigned to a conserved family of regulatory ligand-binding domains. These domains separate the nucleotide binding domains and would interfere with their association required for ATP binding and hydrolysis. Methionine binds to the dimerized carboxyl-terminal domain and is shown to inhibit ATPase activity. These observations are consistent with an allosteric regulatory mechanism operating at the level of transport activity, where increased intracellular levels of the transported ligand stabilize an inward-facing, ATPase-inactive state of MetNI to inhibit further ligand translocation into the cell.
PubMed: 18621668
DOI: 10.1126/science.1157987
PDB entries with the same primary citation
Experimental method
X-RAY DIFFRACTION (2.1 Å)
Structure validation

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