Characterization of Glu126 and Arg144, Two Residues That Are Indispensable for Substrate Binding in the Lactose Permease of Escherichia coli

Abstract
Glu126 and Arg144 in the lactose permease are indispensable for substrate binding and probably form a charge-pair [Venkatesan, P., and Kaback, H. R. (1998) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 95, 9802-9807]. Mutants with Glu126-->Ala or Arg144-->Ala do not bind ligand or catalyze lactose accumulation, efflux, exchange, downhill lactose translocation, or lactose-induced H+ influx. In contrast, mutants with conservative mutations (Glu126-->Asp or Arg144-->Lys) exhibit drastically different phenotypes. Arg144-->Lys permease accumulates lactose slowly to low levels, but does not bind ligand or catalyze equilibrium exchange, efflux, or lactose-induced H+ influx. In contrast, Glu126-->Asp permease catalyzes lactose accumulation and lactose-induced H+ influx to wild-type levels, but at significantly lower rates. Surprisingly, however, no significant exchange or efflux activity is observed. Glu126-->Asp permease exhibits about a 6-fold increase in the Km for active transport relative to wild-type permease with a comparable Vmax. Direct binding assays using flow dialysis demonstrate that mutant Glu126-->Asp binds p-nitrophenyl-alpha,D-galactopyranoside. Indirect binding assays utilizing substrate protection against [14C]-N-ethylmaleimide labeling of single-Cys148 permease reveal an apparent Kd of 3-5 mM for lactose and 15-20 microM for beta, D-galactopyranosyl-1-thio-beta,D-galactopyranoside (TDG). The affinity of Glu126-->Asp/Cys148 permease for lactose is markedly decreased (Kd > 80 mM), while TDG affinity is altered to a much lesser extent (Kd ca. 80 microM). The results extend the conclusion that a carboxylate at position 126 and a guanidinium group at position 144 are irreplaceable for substrate binding and support the idea that Arg144 plays a major role in substrate specificity.