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National Biomedical Resource for
Advanced ESR Spectroscopy

P01 DA012408 (Funded by National Institutes of Health / National Institute on Drug Abuse)
Articles:

Transport Domain Unlocking Sets the Uptake Rate of an Aspartate Transporter
N. Akyuz, E. R. Georgieva, Z. Zhou, S. Stolzenberg, M. A. Cuendet, G. Khelashvili, R. B. Altman, D. S. Terry, J. H. Freed, H. Weinstein, O. Boudker, and S. C. Blanchard
Nature 518 (7537), 68-73 (2015)


Supporting Information
<doi: 10.1038/nature14158>
PMID: 25652997      PMCID: PMC4351760
 

 
ABSTRACT:   Glutamate transporters terminate neurotransmission by clearing synaptically released glutamate from the extracellular space, allowing repeated rounds of signalling and preventing glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity. Crystallographic studies of a glutamate transporter homologue from the archaeon Pyrococcus horikoshii, GltPh, showed that distinct transport domains translocate substrates into the cytoplasm by moving across the membrane within a central trimerization scaffold. Here we report direct observations of these 'elevator-like' transport domain motions in the context of reconstituted proteoliposomes and physiological ion gradients using single-molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer (smFRET) imaging. We show that GltPh bearing two mutations introduced to impart characteristics of the human transporter exhibits markedly increased transport domain dynamics, which parallels an increased rate of substrate transport, thereby establishing a direct temporal relationship between transport domain motion and substrate uptake. Crystallographic and computational investigations corroborated these findings by revealing that the 'humanizing' mutations favour structurally 'unlocked' intermediate states in the transport cycle exhibiting increased solvent occupancy at the interface between the transport domain and the trimeric scaffold.

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