Tryptophan 224 of the rat mitochondrial carnitine/acylcarnitine carrier is crucial for the antiport mechanism, 2019, Giangregorio et al

Andy

Retired committee member
Although I've not read it all I thought this was pretty interesting - my attention was caught by the mention of tryptophan and mitchondria. My, very limited, understanding of what is being discussed suggests that an impairment of the antiport mechanism could impede mitochondrial function.

But this is in rats, so it shouldn't be assumed that this will be the same in humans.

Highlights

  • * Molecular determinants of antiport mechanism of the Carnitine carrier have been characterized.
    * Site directed mutants of the transporter lacking W224 lose the antiport function.
    * W224 is crucial for carnitine binding during the catalytic cycle and for substrate-induced gate opening.
Abstract
The mitochondrial carnitine/acylcarnitine carrier (CACT) catalyzes an antiport of carnitine and acylcarnitines and also a uniport reaction with a rate of about one tenth with respect to the antiport rate. The antiport process results from the coupling of the two uniport reactions in opposite directions. In this mechanism, the transition of the carrier from the outward open conformation to the inward open one (or vice versa) is much faster for the carrier-substrate complex than for the unbound carrier. To investigate the molecular determinants that couple the binding of the substrate with the conformational transitions, site directed mutagenesis has been employed. The antiport or the uniport reaction was followed as [3H]carnitine uptake in or efflux from proteoliposomes reconstituted with the WT or Trp mutants of the rat CACT. Substitution of each the three Trp residues led to different results. Nearly no variations were observed upon substitution of W192 and/or W296 with Ala. While, substantial alteration of the transport function was observed in the mutants W224A, W224Y and W224F. Mutation of W224 led to the loss of the antiport function while the uniport function was unaltered. In these mutants impairment of the substrate affinity on the external side was also observed. The data highlights that W224 is involved in the coupling of the substrate binding with the matrix gate opening. The experimental data are in line with predictions by homology modeling of the CACT in its cytosolic (c-state) or matrix (m-state) opened conformations.
Paywall, https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S000527281930088X?via=ihub
Sci hub, https://sci-hub.se/10.1016/j.bbabio.2019.07.006
 
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