posted on 2016-02-21, 17:07authored byJiaming Liu, Elif Eren, Jagamya Vijayaraghavan, Belete R. Cheneke, Mridhu Indic, Bert van den Berg, Liviu Movileanu
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a Gram-negative
bacterium
that utilizes substrate-specific outer membrane (OM) proteins for
the uptake of small, water-soluble nutrients employed in the growth
and function of the cell. In this paper, we present for the first
time a comprehensive single-channel examination of seven members of
the OM carboxylate channel K (OccK) subfamily. Recent biochemical,
functional, and structural characterization of the OccK proteins revealed
their common features, such as a closely related, monomeric, 18-stranded β-barrel
conformation with a kidney-shaped transmembrane pore and the presence
of a basic ladder within the channel lumen. Here, we report that the
OccK proteins exhibited fairly distinct unitary conductance values,
in a much broader range than previously expected, which includes low
(∼40–100 pS) and medium (∼100–380 pS)
conductance. These proteins showed diverse single-channel dynamics
of current gating transitions, revealing one-open substate (OccK3),
two-open substate (OccK4–OccK6), and three-open substate (OccK1,
OccK2, and OccK7) kinetics with functionally distinct conformations.
Interestingly, we discovered that anion selectivity is a conserved
trait among the members of the OccK subfamily, confirming the presence
of a net pool of positively charged residues within their central
constriction. Moreover, these results are in accord with an increased
specificity and selectivity of these protein channels for negatively
charged, carboxylate-containing substrates. Our findings might ignite
future functional examinations and full atomistic computational studies
for unraveling a mechanistic understanding of the passage of small
molecules across the lumen of substrate-specific, β-barrel OM
proteins.