Mutation of an amino acid residue influencing potassium coupling in the glutamate transporter GLT-1 induces obligate exchange

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Abstract

Glutamate transporters maintain low synaptic concentrations of neurotransmitter by coupling uptake to flux of other ions. After cotransport of glutamic acid with Na+, the cycle is completed by countertransport of K+. We have identified an amino acid residue (glutamate 404) influencing ion coupling in a domain of the transporter implicated previously in kainate binding. Mutation of this residue to aspartate (E404D) prevents both forward and reverse transport induced by K+. Sodium-dependent transmitter exchange and a transporter-mediated chloride conductance are unaffected by the mutation, indicating that this residue selectively influences potassium flux coupling. The results support a kinetic model in which sodium and potassium are translocated in distinct steps and suggest that this highly conserved region of the transporter is intimately associated with the ion permeation pathway.

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Kavanaugh, M. P., Bendahan, A., Zerangue, N., Zhang, Y., & Kanner, B. I. (1997). Mutation of an amino acid residue influencing potassium coupling in the glutamate transporter GLT-1 induces obligate exchange. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 272(3), 1703–1708. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.272.3.1703

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