Characterization of transport through the periplasmic histidine permease using proteoliposomes reconstituted by dialysis

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Abstract

The superfamily of traffic ATPases (ABC transporters) includes bacterial periplasmic transport systems (permeases) and various eukaryotic transporters. The histidine permease of Salmonella typhimurium and Escherichia coli is composed of a membrane-bound complex containing four subunits and of a soluble receptor, the substrate-binding protein (HisJ), and is energized by ATP. The permease was previously reconstituted into proteoliposomes by a detergent dilution method (1). Here we extensively characterize the properties of this permease after reconstitution into proteoliposomes by dialysis and encapsulation of ATP or other reagents by freeze-thawing. We show that histidine transport depends entirely on both ATP and liganded HisJ, with apparent K(m) values of 8 mM and 8 μM, respectively, and is affected by pH, temperature, and salt concentration. Transport is irreversible and accumulation reaches a plateau at which point transport ceases. The permease is inhibited by ADP and by high concentrations of internal histidine. The inhibition by histidine implies that the membrane- bound complex HisQ/M/P carries a substrate-binding site. The reconstituted permease activity corresponds to about 40-70% turnover rate of the in vivo rate of transport.

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Liu, C. E., & Ames, G. F. L. (1997). Characterization of transport through the periplasmic histidine permease using proteoliposomes reconstituted by dialysis. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 272(2), 859–866. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.272.2.859

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