Lactose Permease Scrambles Phospholipids. 2023

Lei Wang, and Peter Bütikofer
Institute of Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine, University of Bern, 3012 Bern, Switzerland.

Lactose permease (LacY) from Escherichia coli belongs to the major facilitator superfamily. It facilitates the co-transport of β-galactosides, including lactose, into cells by using a proton gradient towards the cell. We now show that LacY is capable of scrambling glycerophospholipids across a membrane. We found that purified LacY reconstituted into liposomes at various protein to lipid ratios catalyzed the rapid translocation of fluorescently labeled and radiolabeled glycerophospholipids across the proteoliposome membrane bilayer. The use of LacY mutant proteins unable to transport lactose revealed that glycerophospholipid scrambling was independent of H+/lactose transport activity. Unexpectedly, in a LacY double mutant locked into an occluded conformation glycerophospholipid, scrambling activity was largely inhibited. The corresponding single mutants revealed the importance of amino acids G46 and G262 for glycerophospholipid scrambling of LacY.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries

Related Publications

Lei Wang, and Peter Bütikofer
December 2017, Scientific reports,
Lei Wang, and Peter Bütikofer
January 2006, Annual review of biophysics and biomolecular structure,
Lei Wang, and Peter Bütikofer
January 1983, Methods in enzymology,
Lei Wang, and Peter Bütikofer
December 1993, Journal of bioenergetics and biomembranes,
Lei Wang, and Peter Bütikofer
November 1994, The Journal of experimental biology,
Lei Wang, and Peter Bütikofer
December 1989, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America,
Lei Wang, and Peter Bütikofer
February 1980, Nature,
Lei Wang, and Peter Bütikofer
August 1988, FEBS letters,
Lei Wang, and Peter Bütikofer
June 1995, Biochemistry,
Lei Wang, and Peter Bütikofer
November 2012, Structure (London, England : 1993),
Copied contents to your clipboard!