Site-directed disulfide bonding reveals an interaction site between energy-coupling protein TonB and BtuB, the outer membrane cobalamin transporter.

Article Details

Citation

Cadieux N, Kadner RJ

Site-directed disulfide bonding reveals an interaction site between energy-coupling protein TonB and BtuB, the outer membrane cobalamin transporter.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1999 Sep 14;96(19):10673-8.

PubMed ID
10485884 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Transport of vitamin B(12) across the outer membrane of Escherichia coli, like that of iron-siderophore complexes, is an active transport process requiring a specific outer membrane transporter BtuB, the proton motive force, and the trans-periplasmic energy coupling protein TonB. Interaction between TonB and two of the TonB-dependent siderophore transporters has been detected previously by formaldehyde crosslinking. Here, site-directed disulfide crosslinking demonstrates contact between a conserved region of BtuB, called the TonB-box, and a portion of TonB, previously implicated as the site of suppressors of TonB-box mutations. The specific pattern of disulfide bonding to alternating residues in the TonB-box allowed deduction of the conformation and parallel orientation of the contact region between these two protein segments. Crosslinking at several positions was increased when BtuB was loaded with substrate, and the crosslinking pattern was altered by the presence of substitutions in BtuB that cause a TonB-uncoupled phenotype. This crosslinking process thus reflects protein interactions that are involved in coupling to active transport.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Vitamin B12 transporter BtuBP06129Details