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Screening of candidate substrates and coupling ions of transporters by thermostability shift assays.


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Authors

Palmer, Shane M 
Smith, Anthony C 
Elbourne, Liam Dh 

Abstract

Substrates of most transport proteins have not been identified, limiting our understanding of their role in physiology and disease. Traditional identification methods use transport assays with radioactive compounds, but they are technically challenging and many compounds are unavailable in radioactive form or are prohibitively expensive, precluding large-scale trials. Here, we present a high-throughput screening method that can identify candidate substrates from libraries of unlabeled compounds. The assay is based on the principle that transport proteins recognize substrates through specific interactions, which lead to enhanced stabilization of the transporter population in thermostability shift assays. Representatives of three different transporter (super)families were tested, which differ in structure as well as transport and ion coupling mechanisms. In each case, the substrates were identified correctly from a large set of chemically related compounds, including stereo-isoforms. In some cases, stabilization by substrate binding was enhanced further by ions, providing testable hypotheses on energy coupling mechanisms.

Description

Keywords

E. coli, Microbacterium liquefaciens, S. cerevisiae, Tetrahymena thermophila, Thermothelomyces thermophila, human, ion coupling, molecular biophysics, structural biology, substrate specificity, thermostability, Adenosine Diphosphate, Adenosine Triphosphate, Animals, Biological Assay, Humans, Ions, Ligands, Membrane Transport Proteins, Mitochondria, Protein Stability, Reproducibility of Results, Substrate Specificity, Temperature, Tetrahymena

Journal Title

Elife

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2050-084X
2050-084X

Volume Title

7

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd
Sponsorship
Medical Research Council (MC_U105663139)
Medical Research Council (MC_UU_00015/1)
Medical Research Council (MC_UU_00015/7)
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