High-speed atomic force microscopy reveals a three-state elevator mechanism in the citrate transporter CitS

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Abstract

The secondary active transporter CitS shuttles citrate across the cytoplasmic membrane of gram-negative bacteria by coupling substrate translocation to the transport of two Na+ ions. Static crystal structures suggest an elevator type of transport mechanism with two states: Up and down. However, no dynamic measurements have been performed to substantiate this assumption. Here, we use high-speed atomic force microscopy for real-time visualization of the transport cycle at the level of single transporters. Unexpectedly, instead of a bimodal height distribution for the up and down states, the experiments reveal movements between three distinguishable states, with protrusions of ∼0.5 nm, ∼1.0 nm, and ∼1.6 nm above the membrane, respectively. Furthermore, the real-time measurements show that the individual protomers of the CitS dimer move up and down independently. A three-state elevator model of independently operating protomers resembles the mechanism proposed for the aspartate transporter GltPh. Since CitS and GltPh are structurally unrelated, we conclude that the three-state elevators have evolved independently.

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Maity, S., Trinco, G., Buzón, P., Anshari, Z. R., Kodera, N., Ngo, K. X., … Roos, W. H. (2022). High-speed atomic force microscopy reveals a three-state elevator mechanism in the citrate transporter CitS. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 119(6). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2113927119

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