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| - | <span style="font-size:160%"><b>Structure of Microbial Nanowires Reveals Stacked Hemes that Transport Electrons over Micrometers<ref name=" | + | <span style="font-size:160%"><b>Structure of Microbial Nanowires Reveals Stacked Hemes that Transport Electrons over Micrometers<ref name="m1">Cryo-EM structures of human OAT1 reveal drug |
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binding and inhibition mechanisms https://doi.org/10.1016/j.str.2025.07.019</ref>.</b></span> | binding and inhibition mechanisms https://doi.org/10.1016/j.str.2025.07.019</ref>.</b></span> | ||
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Revision as of 07:59, 30 November 2025
Interactive 3D Complement in Proteopedia
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Structure of Microbial Nanowires Reveals Stacked Hemes that Transport Electrons over Micrometers[1]. | |
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Cell Volume 33, Issue 11, P1856-1866.E5, November 06, 2025 |
Structure Tour
BackgroundMembers of the organic anion transporter (OAT) family, including OAT1, are expressed on the epithelial membrane of the kidney, liver, brain, intestine, and placenta. OAT1 regulates the transport of organic anion drugs from the blood into kidney epithelial cells by utilizing the α-ketoglutarate (α-KG) gradient across the membrane established by the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle.The organic anion transporter 1 (OAT1) also plays a key role in excreting waste from organic drug metabolism and contributes significantly to drug-drug interactions and drug disposition. However, the structural basis of specific substrate and inhibitor transport by human OAT1 (hOAT1) has remained elusive. Here are four cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) structures of hOAT1 in its inward-facing conformation: the apo form, the substrate (olmesartan)-bound form with different anions, and the inhibitor (probenecid)-bound form. Cryo-EM structure of hOAT1
Human OAT1 adopts an inward-facing conformation in a membrane. OAT1 consist of structural features including intracellular helices domain (ICD), extracellular domain (ECD), N-lobe helices (TM1-6), and C-lobe helices (TM7-12). (right) The border of the binding cavity (described in solvent exclude-surface) is formed by residues N35, Y230, Y353, Y354 (upper), and M207 and F442 (lower). Key Structural Characteristics:
Olmesartan recognition by hOAT1The structural and functional analysis of hOAT1 in complex with the high-affinity antihypertensive drug olmesartan provides a detailed blueprint for substrate specificity and binding. 1. Binding Location and Pose
2. Key Interacting Residues Olmesartan is surrounded by residues from multiple transmembrane helices (TM1, TM4, TM5, TM7, TM10, TM11) within a 5 Å distance. The critical interactions involve:
3. Chloride Ion Coordination is Essential A key finding is the role of a chloride ion in stabilizing the olmesartan-bound state.
The OmcS monomer has . Alpha Helices, 310 Helices, Beta Strands , Loops . The structure assigned by the authors is 77% loops; Jmol objectively assigns 82% loops. The authors assigned 10% alpha helices, 7% 310 helices, and 6% beta strands. The OmcS structure determined by Filman et al. [2]was very similar, with 80% loops assigned by the authors (86% by Jmol), having only 3% beta strand but otherwise very similar. We compared OmcS with three other c-type multi-heme cytochrome crystal structures: 1ofw, 3ucp, and 3ov0 had 45%, 49%, and 60% loops respectively. Mechanism of OAT1 inhibition by probenecidThe cryo-EM structure of hOAT1 bound to the classic inhibitor probenecid reveals a dual-mechanism of action that goes beyond simple competition, effectively arresting the transporter in a restricted state. 1. Binding Mode and Direct Competition
2. Conformational Arrest and Cytoplasmic Path Blockage The primary inhibitory mechanism is a probenecid-induced conformational change that physically blocks substrate access and exit.
This structural rearrangement is caused by a slight inward movement of the cytoplasmic ends of TM5, TM8, TM10, and TM11 toward the binding pocket. 3. Locked Conformation By constricting the cytoplasmic access routes, probenecid does not just compete for the substrate-binding site; it stabilizes the transporter in an apo-like, inward-facing conformation that is inaccessible to cytosolic substrates. This prevents the entry of new substrates and likely traps the transporter in this non-functional state, effectively "locking" it and preventing the conformational changes necessary for the transport cycle. Each OmcS monomer : C O N Fe. The hemes are arranged in parallel-displaced pairs. Each pair is orthogonal to the next pair. The , which likely contributes to the stability of the filament. More importantly, this produces a . This continuous chain of hemes is believed to be the basis of the electrical conductivity. Full Mechanism of Binding and Inhibition in hOAT1Overall Transport Cycle & Substrate Binding (e.g., Olmesartan) 1. Outward-Facing State (Hypothesized): The transport cycle begins with the transporter in an outward-facing conformation, open to the extracellular space. Substrates and inhibitors from the blood enter the central binding pocket at this stage. 2. Transition to Inward-Facing State: Upon binding a substrate like olmesartan, the transporter undergoes a conformational change to the inward-facing state, which is the conformation captured in this study. 3. Substrate Binding and Chloride Coordination in the Inward-Open State:
4. Substrate Release: The inward-facing conformation with its open paths (Path A and Path B) allows the substrate to dissociate into the cytoplasm. The transporter then likely resets to the outward-facing state, driven by the exchange with intracellular α-ketoglutarate (α-KG). Inhibition Mechanism (e.g., Probenecid) The inhibitor probenecid exploits the transport cycle but arrests it through a dual mechanism: 1. Binding and Competition:
2. Conformational Arrest and Cytoplasmic Blockade:
Each heme is , which form thioether bonds with the heme vinyl groups (opposite the heme carboxyls): C O N S Fe. 12 CxxCH motifs in the OmcS sequence anchor the 6 hemes within each OmcS chain.
Notes & References
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