1. Introduction
Antimicrobial resistance of pathogenic bacteria represents a global public health threat and the activities of secondary active membrane transporters that are members of the major facilitator superfamily (MFS) contribute to this phenomenon. These transporters utilize the transmembrane electrochemical proton gradient to drive antimicrobials out of the cell (Fluman & Bibi, Reference Fluman and Bibi2009). Biochemical and structural data for the bacterial MFS multidrug/H+ antiporters are consistent with a general mechanism that constrains the simultaneous binding of substrate and protons to the protein to enable the loading, transmembrane transport, and subsequent periplasmic release of the cytotoxic cargo, while at the same time, impeding any proton leakage that could injure or kill the cell (Zhang et al., Reference Zhang, Zhao, Heng and Jiang2015). The feasibility of such a mechanism is dependent on the competition between substrate and protons for binding to the transporter (Schuldiner, Reference Schuldiner2014), which in turn is mediated by tuning of the pK a of the carboxyl groups of one or more highly conserved acidic residues located within or near the substrate binding site in the membrane-embedded regions of the protein (Adler et al., Reference Adler, Lewinson and Bibi2004; Sigal et al., Reference Sigal, Molshanski-Mor and Bibi2006). A previous study of the model Escherichia coli MFS multidrug efflux antiporter MdfA demonstrated that substrates and protons compete for binding to the protein (Fluman et al., Reference Fluman, Ryan, Whitelegge and Bibi2012). The present study investigated the effects of proton concentration on binding of antimicrobial substrate tetraphenylphosphonium (TPP+) to the E. coli MFS multidrug/H+ antiporter MdtM and provides additional supporting evidence that the competition for binding between drug substrate and protons is a general feature of secondary multidrug efflux.
2. Methods
2.1. Plasmids
Design and construction of the expression plasmid that contained the 1,230 bp coding region of the mdtM open reading frame has been described in detail before (Holdsworth & Law, Reference Holdsworth and Law2012). Briefly, the construct encoded the 410 amino acid residues of MdtM with a C-terminal myc-epitope and a hexahistidine tag to facilitate purification of the protein. Inclusion of a thrombin-specific proteolysis site permitted cleavage of the myc-His tag.
2.2. Overexpression and purification of MdtM
MdtM was overexpressed in E. coli LMG194 cells and purified using a previously described protocol (Alegre & Law, Reference Alegre and Law2015).
2.3. Substrate binding assays
The affinity of purified MdtM in 20 mM Bis–Tris propane (titrated to the appropriate pH with HCl), 100 mM NaCl, 10% (v/v) glycerol, and 0.1% (w/v) n-dodecyl β-D-maltoside (DDM) detergent for TPP+ substrate was determined over a pH range of 5.9–8.8 by intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence quenching studies. Steady state fluorescence measurements were performed on sample in a 1.0 cm × 0.5 cm quartz cuvette using a Fluoromax-4 fluorometer (Horiba, UK) equipped with a magnetically stirred and temperature-controlled cuvette holder set to 25°C. The longer pathlength of the cuvette was oriented toward the excitation source. Excitation and emission wavelengths were set to 295 nm (to excite tryptophans of MdtM exclusively) and 335 nm (the maximum fluorescence emission wavelength of MdtM), respectively. Excitation slit width was set to 1.5 nm and emission slit width to 3.0 nm.
Freshly purified MdtM was added to the cuvette to a final concentration of 0.22 μM in 1.5 ml and allowed to equilibrate to 25°C for 5 min. The protein solution was then titrated with TPP+ by the sequential addition of a stock TPP+ solution to a final concentration of 100 μM. A 60 s equilibration period between addition of TPP+ and measurement of fluorescence emission was allowed. In all the fluorescence experiments, the total volume of stock TPP+ solution added to the protein sample was less than 2% of the initial assay volume. Measurements were performed in triplicate and to ensure consistency and reproducibility of the titrations, the same stocks of TPP+ and the same set of calibrated autopipettes (Gilson, UK) were used for all the substrate binding experiments. The collected buffer subtracted data were corrected for dilution and used to calculate a percentage fluorescence quench for each TPP+ addition. Due to the negligible UV absorbance of TPP+ at the fluorescence excitation wavelength of 295 nm, correction for inner filter effects was not required. The resulting intrinsic fluorescence quenching curves were analyzed using nonlinear regression binding analysis available in GraphPad Prism v 9.1.0 (GraphPad Software Inc., San Diego, CA). This approach permitted extraction of the apparent equilibrium dissociation constant, Kd app, of binding of TPP+ to MdtM at each pH tested using the equation y = B max[TPP+]/(Kd + [TPP+]).
3. Results
Competition between protons and antimicrobial substrate for binding MdtM was studied by measuring the quench of intrinsic protein fluorescence upon titration of TPP+ into a solution of purified MdtM at a range of different pH values (Figure 1). Increasing the proton concentration by acidification of the protein solution reduced the affinity of MdtM for TPP+ substrate (Figure 2), suggesting that protons inhibit binding of substrate in a competitive manner. The Kd app measurements of ~400 nM for TPP+ binding to MdtM at the neutral and alkaline pH values tested compare well with a previously published Kd app for TPP+ binding to the protein at pH 8.0 (Alegre et al., Reference Alegre, Paul, Labarbuta and Law2016). A fit of the binding data in Figure 2 enabled the analysis of the effects of proton concentration on TPP+ binding affinity. This analysis estimated an inhibition constant, K i, of 0.6 μM for protons, which corresponded to a pKa of 6.23. To ensure that the binding data were not compromised by changes in the structural integrity of solubilized MdtM at the extremes of pH tested, the fluorescence emission spectrum of the protein was measured between 310 and 400 nm at pH values of 5.9 and 8.8 (Figure 3). These spectra were compared to the spectrum of MdtM denatured by incubation at pH 8.0 in a 1% (v/v) sodium dodecylsulphate (SDS) solution (Figure 3). Denaturation by SDS resulted in a significant reduction of the fluorescence intensity and a ~8 nm red-shift of the maximum fluorescence emission peak of MdtM compared to the spectra obtained for nondenatured protein. These data support that the integrity of MdtM was not affected by acidification or alkalinization of the protein solution.
4. Discussion
The mechanism of secondary MFS drug/H+ antiporters suggests that different binding affinities for the drug cargo must exist with high affinity binding to the protein in the “inward-facing” conformation to scavenge drugs from the cell interior and low affinity binding in the “outward-facing” conformation to enable the drug to be dispensed into the periplasm or extracellular milieu. Such transmembrane movement of drug substrate is coupled to the counter-movement of protons across the membrane via a ping-pong mechanism, in which the substrate must be released prior to binding and subsequent translocation of the counterion (Law et al., Reference Law, Maloney and Wang2008). Competition between protons and substrate is regarded as integral to the catalytic transport activity of the electrochemical proton gradient-driven MFS antiporters. In the MFS drug/H+ antiporter MdfA, the whole process is modulated by protonation of two conserved, membrane-embedded acidic residues; a glutamate at position 26 and aspartate at position 34 (Fluman et al., Reference Fluman, Ryan, Whitelegge and Bibi2012). MdtM possesses two membrane-embedded aspartate residues at positions 22 and 30 (Holdsworth & Law, Reference Holdsworth and Law2012) and it is pertinent to speculate that these residues represent the protonation sites in that transporter.
The nature of the competition between substrate and protons can vary between MFS family members. In MdfA, this competition is allosteric with protons and TPP+ binding to different sites in the protein (Fluman et al., Reference Fluman, Ryan, Whitelegge and Bibi2012). It is likely that the same mutually exclusive binding of protons and substrate is a feature of MdtM. In contrast, the MFS multidrug transporter LmrP from Lactococcus lactis exploits a combination of direct and indirect competition for its function (Schaedler & van Veen, Reference Schaedler and van Veen2010). Irrespective of the exact flavor of competition proposed for different secondary multidrug family members of the MFS, the inhibition of TPP+ binding to MdtM by protons demonstrated by the current work is a further indication that substrate/counterion competition is a feature of MFS antiporters in general.
5. Conclusion
The work presented here on the MFS drug/H+ antiporter MdtM validates a previous study on the related MdfA protein and provides additional strong empirical evidence that interplay between protons and substrate during binding to MFS drug/H+ antiporters is common to these proteins, and essential to their function.
Funding statement
This work was funded in part by BBSRC grant BB/K014226/1 to C.J.L.
Conflict of interest
The author declares none.
Authorship contributions
C.J.L. conceived the work, performed the experiments, interpreted the data, produced the figures, and wrote the manuscript.
Data availability statement
Data used for this article are available from the author on reasonable request.
Conflicts of interest
none.
Comments
Comments to the Author: This manuscript reports on the effects of pH on antimicrobial binding to the well characterised multidrug efflux pump, MdtM.
The experiment reported is well designed and executed to an excellent standard producing very clear results that are well interpreted. These data fully support previously published research on other proton-driven drug efflux pumps suggesting competitive binding of protons is a common mechanism for proton-driven drug efflux pumps.