Amino acid residues N450 and Q449 are critical for the uptake capacity and specificity of UapA, a prototype of a nucleobase-ascorbate transporter family

Specific carrier-mediated transport of purine and pyrimidine nucleobases across cell membranes is a basic biological process in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Recent in silico analysis has shown that the Aspergillus nidulans (UapA, UapC) and bacterial (PbuX, UraA, PyrP) nucleobase transporters, and a group of mammalian L-ascorbic acid transporters (SVCT1 and SVCT2), constitute a unique protein family which includes putative homologues from archea, bacteria, plants and metazoans. The construction and functional analysis of chimeric purine transporters (UapA-U apC) and UapA-specific missense mutations in A. nidulans has previously shown that the region including amino acid residues 378-446 in UapA is critical for purine recognition and transport. Here, we extend our studies on UapA structure-function relationships by studying missense mutations constructed within a `signature' sequence motif [(F/Y/S)X(Q/E/P)N XGXXXXT(K/R/G)] which is conserved in the putative functional region of all members of the nucleobase/ascorbate transporter family. Residues Q449 and N450 were found to be critical for purine recognition and transport. The results suggest that these residues might directly or indirectly be involved in specific interactions with the purine ring. In particular, interaction of residue 449 with C-2 groups of purines might act as a critical molecular filter involved in the selection of transported substrates. The present and previous mutagenic analyses in UapA suggest that specific polar or charged amino acid residues on either side of an amphipathic a-helical transmembrane segment are critical for purine binding and transport.

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