6LH1
Crystal structure of a cysteine-pair mutant (Y113C-P190C) of a bacterial bile acid transporter trapped in an outward-facing conformation
Summary for 6LH1
Entry DOI | 10.2210/pdb6lh1/pdb |
Related | 7CYG 7CYK |
Descriptor | Transporter, sodium/bile acid symporter family, CITRIC ACID, 2,3-dihydroxypropyl (9Z)-octadec-9-enoate, ... (4 entities in total) |
Functional Keywords | bile acid transporter, asbt, ntcp, slc10, transport protein |
Biological source | Yersinia frederiksenii |
Total number of polymer chains | 1 |
Total formula weight | 34217.01 |
Authors | |
Primary citation | Wang, X.,Lyu, Y.,Ji, Y.,Sun, Z.,Zhou, X. An engineered disulfide bridge traps and validates an outward-facing conformation in a bile acid transporter. Acta Crystallogr D Struct Biol, 77:108-116, 2021 Cited by PubMed Abstract: Apical sodium-dependent bile acid transporter (ASBT) mediates the uptake of bile acids from the ileum lumen into enterocytes and presents a potential target for the treatment of several metabolic diseases, including type 2 diabetes. It has been proposed that the underlying mechanism for transport by ASBT is an elevator-style alternating-access model, which was deduced mainly by comparing high-resolution structures of two bacterial ASBT homologs (ASBT from Neisseria meningitides and ASBT from Yersinia frederiksenii) in different conformations. However, one important issue is that the only outward-facing structure (PDB entry 4n7x) was obtained with an Na-binding site mutant of ASBT, which severely cripples its transport function, and therefore the physiological relevance of the conformation in PDB entry 4n7x requires further careful evaluation. Here, another crystal structure is reported of ASBT that was captured in a state closely resembling the conformation in PDB entry 4n7x using an engineered disulfide bridge. The introduced cysteine mutations avoided any proposed Na- or substrate-binding residues, and the resulting mutant retained both structural and functional integrity and behaved similarly to wild-type ASBT. These data support the hypothesis that the PDB entry 4n7x-like structure represents a functional outward-facing conformation of ASBT in its transport cycle. PubMed: 33404530DOI: 10.1107/S205979832001517X PDB entries with the same primary citation |
Experimental method | X-RAY DIFFRACTION (2.861 Å) |
Structure validation
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