The hydrophilic subunit of the mannose transporter
(IIABMan) of Escherichia coli is a
homodimer that contains four tryptophans per monomer, three
in the N-terminal domain (Trp12, Trp33, and Trp69) and
one in the C-terminal domain (Trp182). Single and double
Trp-Phe mutants of IIABMan and of the IIA domain
were produced. Fluorescence emission studies revealed that
Trp33 and Trp12 are the major fluorescence emitters, Trp69
is strongly quenched in the native protein and Trp182 strongly
blue shifted, indicative of a hydrophobic environment.
Stabilities of the Trp mutants of dimeric IIAMan
and IIABMan were estimated from midpoints of
the GdmHCl-induced unfolding transitions and from the amount
of dimers that resisted dissociation by SDS (sodium dodecyl
sulfate), respectively. W12F exhibited increased stability,
but only 6% of the wild-type phosphotransferase activity,
whereas W33F was marginally and W69F significantly destabilized,
but fully active. Second site mutations W33F and W69F in
the background of the W12F mutation reduced protein stability
and suppressed the functional defect of W12F. These results
suggest that flexibility is required for the adjustments
of protein–protein contacts necessary for the phosphoryltransfer
between the phosphorylcarrier protein HPr, IIAMan,
IIBMan, and the incoming mannose bound to the
transmembrane IICMan–IIDMan
complex.