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The molecular basis for substrate recognition and gating in sugar transporters
Stockholm University, Faculty of Science, Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics.ORCID iD: 0000-0002-6855-9295
2023 (English)Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

Sugar is a vital sustenance for most forms of life. For a cell to take up sugar, specialized transport proteins embedded into the membrane bilayer known as sugar porters, are required. Dysfunction of sugar porters is associated with some metabolic diseases, and their expression is upregulated in many cancers as they typically require more sugar than normal cells. Furthermore, sugar porters also play a role in the vitality of the malaria parasite.

The mechanism of sugar transport is known as a rocker-switch alternating access mechanism. Simplistically, sugar binds between two similar domains on the outside of a sugar transporter and the domains then move around the sugar, so the sugar is exposed to the inside. During this domain movement, protein mass will block the sugar binding site from both outside and inside, forming the occluded state which is essential to ensure no substrate leakage during transport. Despite this relatively simple model of transport, little is known about how different sugar porters display diverse substrate specificity, affinity, and turnover.

In the four papers making up this thesis, we structurally characterize missing pieces of the sugar transport cycle, identify how these states are connected with simulations, and assess factors contributing to sugar transport by functional assays. With simulations, we show how sugar catalyzes conformational change by interacting with the occluded state. We demonstrate our functional proteoliposome-based transport assay, which allows us to measure the effect of protein mutations, inhibitors, and lipid influences in sugar recognition and turnover. Characterization of the malaria parasite hexose transporter PfHT1 has allowed us to understand antimalarial inhibitor specificity against this protein which could have implications in combating the disease, as well as pharmacological control of sugar porters in general.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Stockholm: Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Stockholm University , 2023. , p. 63
Keywords [en]
membrane transport, sugar transporter, simulations, lipids, antimalarial drugs
National Category
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Biophysics
Research subject
Biochemistry
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:su:diva-222119ISBN: 978-91-8014-528-2 (print)ISBN: 978-91-8014-529-9 (electronic)OAI: oai:DiVA.org:su-222119DiVA, id: diva2:1803582
Public defence
2023-12-08, Vivi Täckholmssalen (Q211), NPQ-huset, Svante Arrhenius väg 20 and online via Zoom, public link is available at the department website, Stockholm, 14:30 (English)
Opponent
Supervisors
Available from: 2023-11-15 Created: 2023-10-09 Last updated: 2023-11-07Bibliographically approved
List of papers
1. The molecular basis for sugar import in malaria parasites
Open this publication in new window or tab >>The molecular basis for sugar import in malaria parasites
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2020 (English)In: Nature, ISSN 0028-0836, E-ISSN 1476-4687, Vol. 578, no 7794, p. 321-325Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Elucidating the mechanism of sugar import requires a molecular understanding of how transporters couple sugar binding and gating events. Whereas mammalian glucose transporters (GLUTs) are specialists(1), the hexose transporter from the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum PfHT1(2,3) has acquired the ability to transport both glucose and fructose sugars as efficiently as the dedicated glucose (GLUT3) and fructose (GLUT5) transporters. Here, to establish the molecular basis of sugar promiscuity in malaria parasites, we determined the crystal structure of PfHT1 in complex with d-glucose at a resolution of 3.6 angstrom. We found that the sugar-binding site in PfHT1 is very similar to those of the distantly related GLUT3 and GLUT5 structures(4,5). Nevertheless, engineered PfHT1 mutations made to match GLUT sugar-binding sites did not shift sugar preferences. The extracellular substrate-gating helix TM7b in PfHT1 was positioned in a fully occluded conformation, providing a unique glimpse into how sugar binding and gating are coupled. We determined that polar contacts between TM7b and TM1 (located about 15 angstrom from d-glucose) are just as critical for transport as the residues that directly coordinate d-glucose, which demonstrates a strong allosteric coupling between sugar binding and gating. We conclude that PfHT1 has achieved substrate promiscuity not by modifying its sugar-binding site, but instead by evolving substrate-gating dynamics. Crystal structure of the Plasmodium falciparum hexose transporter PfHT1 reveals the molecular basis of its ability to transport multiple types of sugar as efficiently as the dedicated mammalian glucose and fructose transporters.

National Category
Biological Sciences Chemical Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-179597 (URN)10.1038/s41586-020-1963-z (DOI)000510138600004 ()31996846 (PubMedID)
Available from: 2020-03-23 Created: 2020-03-23 Last updated: 2023-10-09Bibliographically approved
2. Determinants of sugar-induced influx in the mammalian fructose transporter GLUT5
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Determinants of sugar-induced influx in the mammalian fructose transporter GLUT5
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2023 (English)In: eLIFE, E-ISSN 2050-084X, Vol. 12, article id e84808Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

In mammals, glucose transporters (GLUT) control organism-wide blood-glucose homeostasis. In human, this is accomplished by 14 different GLUT isoforms, that transport glucose and other monosaccharides with varying substrate preferences and kinetics. Nevertheless, there is little difference between the sugar-coordinating residues in the GLUT proteins and even the malarial Plasmodium falciparum transporter PfHT1, which is uniquely able to transport a wide range of different sugars. PfHT1 was captured in an intermediate 'occluded' state, revealing how the extracellular gating helix TM7b has moved to break and occlude the sugar-binding site. Sequence difference and kinetics indicated that the TM7b gating helix dynamics and interactions likely evolved to enable substrate promiscuity in PfHT1, rather than the sugar-binding site itself. It was unclear, however, if the TM7b structural transitions observed in PfHT1 would be similar in the other GLUT proteins. Here, using enhanced sampling molecular dynamics simulations, we show that the fructose transporter GLUT5 spontaneously transitions through an occluded state that closely resembles PfHT1. The coordination of D-fructose lowers the energetic barriers between the outward- and inward-facing states, and the observed binding mode for D-fructose is consistent with biochemical analysis. Rather than a substrate-binding site that achieves strict specificity by having a high affinity for the substrate, we conclude GLUT proteins have allosterically coupled sugar binding with an extracellular gate that forms the high-affinity transition-state instead. This substrate-coupling pathway presumably enables the catalysis of fast sugar flux at physiological relevant blood-glucose concentrations.

National Category
Other Biological Topics
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-220841 (URN)10.7554/eLife.84808 (DOI)001024510300001 ()37405832 (PubMedID)2-s2.0-85163948061 (Scopus ID)
Available from: 2023-09-14 Created: 2023-09-14 Last updated: 2023-11-06Bibliographically approved
3. Establishing mammalian GLUT kinetics and lipid composition influences in a reconstituted-liposome system
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Establishing mammalian GLUT kinetics and lipid composition influences in a reconstituted-liposome system
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2023 (English)In: Nature Communications, E-ISSN 2041-1723, Vol. 14, no 1Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Transport assays using purified glucose transporters (GLUTs) have proven to be difficult to implement, hampering deeper mechanistic insights. Here the authors have optimized a transport assay in liposomes that will provide insight to study other membrane transport proteins. Glucose transporters (GLUTs) are essential for organism-wide glucose homeostasis in mammals, and their dysfunction is associated with numerous diseases, such as diabetes and cancer. Despite structural advances, transport assays using purified GLUTs have proven to be difficult to implement, hampering deeper mechanistic insights. Here, we have optimized a transport assay in liposomes for the fructose-specific isoform GLUT5. By combining lipidomic analysis with native MS and thermal-shift assays, we replicate the GLUT5 transport activities seen in crude lipids using a small number of synthetic lipids. We conclude that GLUT5 is only active under a specific range of membrane fluidity, and that human GLUT1-4 prefers a similar lipid composition to GLUT5. Although GLUT3 is designated as the high-affinity glucose transporter, in vitro D-glucose kinetics demonstrates that GLUT1 and GLUT3 actually have a similar K-M,K- but GLUT3 has a higher turnover. Interestingly, GLUT4 has a high K-M for D-glucose and yet a very slow turnover, which may have evolved to ensure uptake regulation by insulin-dependent trafficking. Overall, we outline a much-needed transport assay for measuring GLUT kinetics and our analysis implies that high-levels of free fatty acid in membranes, as found in those suffering from metabolic disorders, could directly impair glucose uptake.

National Category
Other Natural Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-221385 (URN)10.1038/s41467-023-39711-y (DOI)001027089000013 ()37429918 (PubMedID)2-s2.0-85164297820 (Scopus ID)
Available from: 2023-09-20 Created: 2023-09-20 Last updated: 2023-10-09Bibliographically approved
4. Probing inhibition of the malaria parasite hexose transporter
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Probing inhibition of the malaria parasite hexose transporter
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(English)Manuscript (preprint) (Other academic)
National Category
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-222111 (URN)
Available from: 2023-10-09 Created: 2023-10-09 Last updated: 2023-10-09

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