A lipid gating mechanism for the channel-forming O antigen ABC transporter

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Abstract

Extracellular glycan biosynthesis is a widespread microbial protection mechanism. In Gram-negative bacteria, the O antigen polysaccharide represents the variable region of outer membrane lipopolysaccharides. Fully assembled lipid-linked O antigens are translocated across the inner membrane by the WzmWzt ABC transporter for ligation to the lipopolysaccharide core, with the transporter forming a continuous transmembrane channel in a nucleotide-free state. Here, we report its structure in an ATP-bound conformation. Large structural changes within the nucleotide-binding and transmembrane regions push conserved hydrophobic residues at the substrate entry site towards the periplasm and provide a model for polysaccharide translocation. With ATP bound, the transporter forms a large transmembrane channel with openings toward the membrane and periplasm. The channel’s periplasmic exit is sealed by detergent molecules that block solvent permeation. Molecular dynamics simulation data suggest that, in a biological membrane, lipid molecules occupy this periplasmic exit and prevent water flux in the transporter’s resting state.

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Caffalette, C. A., Corey, R. A., Sansom, M. S. P., Stansfeld, P. J., & Zimmer, J. (2019). A lipid gating mechanism for the channel-forming O antigen ABC transporter. Nature Communications, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-08646-8

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