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Title: BEYOND FUNCTINAL COMPLEMENTATION IN YEAST: MOLECULAR ANALYSIS OF AMINO ACID TRANSPORTER STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION

Author
item CHEN, LISHAN - PLANT BIO UOF I URBANA IL
item BUSH, DANIEL

Submitted to: Arabidopsis Research International Conference Proceedings
Publication Type: Abstract Only
Publication Acceptance Date: 6/25/1996
Publication Date: N/A
Citation: N/A

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: Although plants are photoautotrophic organisms, they contain many heterotrophic tissue systems that must import sugars and amino acids from primary sites of assimilation to support growth and development. This resource redistribution process is a fundamental activity that allows higher plants to function as multicellular organisms. Recently, our laboratory used functional complementation of yeast mutants as a novel approach to clone Arabidopsis amino acid transporters. In the results reported here, we've exploited the yeast expression system to extend our understanding of the molecular structure and function of these essential proteins. Previous biochemical evidence implicated a histidine residue in the reaction mechanism. Site-directed mutagenesis of His337, located in a predicted trans-membrane domain, identified that amino acid as an essential residue for transport function. In a complementary approach, we've also used random mutagenesis and transgenic expression to select mutant forms of the porter with altered substrate binding properties and coupling. This was possible by designing screens that identify mutant form of the transporter that exhibit altered transport properties. To date, we have five class of mutations that alter function. By mapping the location of specific residues that impact substrate binding and energy coupling, we are building a model of the folded porter in the membrane and are using that information to anchor our knowledge of transport mechanism and porter regulation.