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Membrane Transport BL4010 11.28.05 Outline • • • • • Passive Diffusion Facilitated Diffusion Active Transport Transport Driven by ATP, light, etc. Specialized Membrane Pores • Ionophore Antibiotics Trp (red) and Tyr (gold) at the interface The Na+/K+ ATPase ATP hydrolysis drives 3Na+ out and 2K+ in Na+/K+ Transport • Hypertension involves apparent inhibition of sodium pump. Inhibition in cells lining blood vessels • accumulation of Na+, Ca2+ • this inhibitor is the cardiac glycosyide, ouabain The Gastric H+/K+ ATPase The enzyme that keeps the stomach at pH 0.8 • The parietal cells of the gastric mucosa (lining of the stomach) have an internal pH of 7.4 • H,K-ATPase pumps protons from these cells into the stomach to maintain a pH difference across a single plasma membrane of 6.6! • This is the largest concentration gradient across a membrane in eukaryotic organisms! • H,K-ATPase is similar in many respects to Na,K-ATPase and CaATPase (P-type) Osteoclast Proton Pumps How your body takes your bones apart! • Bone material undergoes ongoing remodeling • osteoclasts tear down bone tissue • osteoblasts build it back up • Osteoclasts function by secreting acid into the space between the osteoclast membrane and the bone surface - acid dissolves the Ca-phosphate matrix of the bone • An ATP-driven proton pump in the membrane does this! The MDR ATPase aka the P-glycoprotein • Animal cells have a transport system that is designed to recognize foreign organic molecules and transport them out of the cell usingthe hydrolytic energy of ATP • MDR ATPase is a member of a "superfamily" of genes/proteins that appear to have arisen as a "tandem repeat" • MDR ATPase interferes with drug treatments such as chemotherapy Secondary Active Transport Transport processes driven by ion gradients • Many amino acids and sugars are accumulated by cells in transport processes driven by ion gradients • Symport - ion and the amino acid or sugar are transported in the same direction across the membrane • Antiport - ion and transported species move in opposite directions Porins Found in Gram-negative bacteria and in mitochondrial outer membrane • • • • • Porins are pore-forming proteins - 30-50 kD General or specific - exclusion limits 600-6000 Most arrange in membrane as trimers High homology between various porins Porin from Rhodobacter capsulatus has 16stranded beta barrel that traverses the membrane to form the pore Why Beta Sheets? • Genetic economy? • -helix requires 21-25 residues per transmembrane strand • -strand requires only 9-11 residues per transmembrane strand The Pore-Forming Toxins • Lethal molecules produced by many organisms • They insert themselves into the host cell plasma membrane • They kill by collapsing ion gradients, facilitating entry by toxic agents, or introducing a harmful catalytic activity Colicins • Produced by E. coli • Inhibit growth of other bacteria (even other strains of E. coli) • Single colicin molecule can kill a host! • Three domains: translocation (T), receptor-binding (R), and channelforming (C) Channel Formation • C-domain: 10-helix bundle, with H8 and H9 forming a hydrophobic hairpin • Other helices amphipathic • H8 and H9 insert, with others splayed on the membrane surface • A transmembrane potential causes the amphipathic helices to insert! Other PoreForming Toxins • Hemolysin from Staphylococcus aureus forms a symmetrical pore • Aerolysin may form a heptameric pore - with each monomer providing 3 beta strands to a membranespanning barrel Amphipathic Helices form Transmembrane Ion Channels • Many natural peptides form oligomeric transmembrane channels • The peptides form amphiphilic -helices • Aggregates of these helices form channels that have a hydrophobic surface and a polar center • Melittin (bee venom), magainins (frogs) and cecropin (from cecropia moths) are examples Amphipathic Helices • Melittin - bee venom toxin - 26 residues • Cecropin A - cecropia moths - 37 residues • Magainin 2 amide - frogs - 23 residues • See Figure 10.35 to appreciate helical wheel presentation of the amphipathic helix The Magainin Peptides • Incisions on Xenopus laevis (African clawed frog) healed without infection, even in bacteria-filled aquarium water The Cecropins • Produced by Hyalophora cecropia when the moth is challenged by bacterial infections • These peptides are thought to form -helical aggregates in membranes, creating an ion channel in the center of the aggregate Gap Junctions • • • • Animal cells Provide metabolic connections Provide a means of chemical transfer Provide a means of communication Permit large number of cells to act in synchrony Gap Junctions • Hexameric arrays of a single 32 kD protein • Subunits are tilted with respect to central axis • Pore in center can be opened or closed by the tilting of the subunits, e.g. as response to stress Ionophore Antibiotics Mobile carrier or pore (channel) • How to distinguish? Temperature! • Pores will not be greatly affected by temperature, so transport rates are approximately constant over large temperature ranges • Carriers depend on the fluidity of the membrane, so transport rates are highly sensitive to temperature, especially near the phase transition of the membrane lipids Valinomycin • • • • • A classic mobile carrier A depsipeptide - a molecule with both peptide and ester bonds Valinomycin is a dodecadepsipeptide The structure places several carbonyl oxygens in the center of the ring structure Potassium and other ions coordinate the oxygens Valinomycin-potassium complex diffuses freely and rapid across membranes Selectivity of Valinomycin • • • • Why? K + and Rb + bind tightly, but affinities for Na + and Li + are about a thousand-fold lower Radius of the ions is one consideration Hydration is another - see page 324 for solvation energies It "costs more" energetically to desolvate Na+ and Li+ than K+ Gramicidin • • • • • A classic channel ionophore Linear 15-residue peptide - alternating D & L Structure in organic solvents is double helical Structure in water is end-to-end helical dimer Unusual helix - 6.3 residues per turn with a central hole - 0.4 nm or 4 A diameter Ions migrate through the central pore