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Early Intermediates in the Transport Cycle of the Neuronal Excitatory Amino Acid Carrier Eaac1

Electrogenic glutamate transport by the excitatory amino acid carrier 1 (EAAC1) is associated with multiple charge movements across the membrane that take place on time scales ranging from microseconds to milliseconds. The molecular nature of these charge movements is poorly understood at present an...

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Autores principales: Watzke, Natalie, Bamberg, Ernst, Grewer, Christof
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 2001
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2232401/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11382805
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author Watzke, Natalie
Bamberg, Ernst
Grewer, Christof
author_facet Watzke, Natalie
Bamberg, Ernst
Grewer, Christof
author_sort Watzke, Natalie
collection PubMed
description Electrogenic glutamate transport by the excitatory amino acid carrier 1 (EAAC1) is associated with multiple charge movements across the membrane that take place on time scales ranging from microseconds to milliseconds. The molecular nature of these charge movements is poorly understood at present and, therefore, was studied in this report in detail by using the technique of laser-pulse photolysis of caged glutamate providing a 100-μs time resolution. In the inward transport mode, the deactivation of the transient component of the glutamate-induced coupled transport current exhibits two exponential components. Similar results were obtained when restricting EAAC1 to Na(+) translocation steps by removing potassium, thus, demonstrating (1) that substrate translocation of EAAC1 is coupled to inward movement of positive charge and, therefore, electrogenic; and (2) the existence of at least two distinct intermediates in the Na(+)-binding and glutamate translocation limb of the EAAC1 transport cycle. Together with the determination of the sodium ion concentration and voltage dependence of the two-exponential charge movement and of the steady-state EAAC1 properties, we developed a kinetic model that is based on sequential binding of Na(+) and glutamate to their extracellular binding sites on EAAC1 explaining our results. In this model, at least one Na(+) ion and thereafter glutamate rapidly bind to the transporter initiating a slower, electroneutral structural change that makes EAAC1 competent for further, voltage-dependent binding of additional sodium ion(s). Once the fully loaded EAAC1 complex is formed, it can undergo a much slower, electrogenic translocation reaction to expose the substrate and ion binding sites to the cytoplasm.
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spelling pubmed-22324012008-04-22 Early Intermediates in the Transport Cycle of the Neuronal Excitatory Amino Acid Carrier Eaac1 Watzke, Natalie Bamberg, Ernst Grewer, Christof J Gen Physiol Original Article Electrogenic glutamate transport by the excitatory amino acid carrier 1 (EAAC1) is associated with multiple charge movements across the membrane that take place on time scales ranging from microseconds to milliseconds. The molecular nature of these charge movements is poorly understood at present and, therefore, was studied in this report in detail by using the technique of laser-pulse photolysis of caged glutamate providing a 100-μs time resolution. In the inward transport mode, the deactivation of the transient component of the glutamate-induced coupled transport current exhibits two exponential components. Similar results were obtained when restricting EAAC1 to Na(+) translocation steps by removing potassium, thus, demonstrating (1) that substrate translocation of EAAC1 is coupled to inward movement of positive charge and, therefore, electrogenic; and (2) the existence of at least two distinct intermediates in the Na(+)-binding and glutamate translocation limb of the EAAC1 transport cycle. Together with the determination of the sodium ion concentration and voltage dependence of the two-exponential charge movement and of the steady-state EAAC1 properties, we developed a kinetic model that is based on sequential binding of Na(+) and glutamate to their extracellular binding sites on EAAC1 explaining our results. In this model, at least one Na(+) ion and thereafter glutamate rapidly bind to the transporter initiating a slower, electroneutral structural change that makes EAAC1 competent for further, voltage-dependent binding of additional sodium ion(s). Once the fully loaded EAAC1 complex is formed, it can undergo a much slower, electrogenic translocation reaction to expose the substrate and ion binding sites to the cytoplasm. The Rockefeller University Press 2001-06-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2232401/ /pubmed/11382805 Text en © 2001 The Rockefeller University Press This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original Article
Watzke, Natalie
Bamberg, Ernst
Grewer, Christof
Early Intermediates in the Transport Cycle of the Neuronal Excitatory Amino Acid Carrier Eaac1
title Early Intermediates in the Transport Cycle of the Neuronal Excitatory Amino Acid Carrier Eaac1
title_full Early Intermediates in the Transport Cycle of the Neuronal Excitatory Amino Acid Carrier Eaac1
title_fullStr Early Intermediates in the Transport Cycle of the Neuronal Excitatory Amino Acid Carrier Eaac1
title_full_unstemmed Early Intermediates in the Transport Cycle of the Neuronal Excitatory Amino Acid Carrier Eaac1
title_short Early Intermediates in the Transport Cycle of the Neuronal Excitatory Amino Acid Carrier Eaac1
title_sort early intermediates in the transport cycle of the neuronal excitatory amino acid carrier eaac1
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2232401/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11382805
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