This work allowed the researchers to solve a long-lasting riddle. It was known that these transporters work like an elevator, where the substrate glutamine is engulfed by the protein, and then carried over a long distance through the cell membrane from the outside to the inside of the cell. While it was known how the substrate enters the elevator on the outside, it remained enigmatic what happens on the inside. This study now shows for the first time how the transported glutamine is released into the cytoplasm of the cell. The release mechanism is surprisingly similar to its catch mechanism on the outside of the cell. The same gate - a.k.a. elevator door - is used on either side of the membrane. "Hence, we have named the transport mechanism a 'one-gate elevator', which sets it apart from the more commonly observed mechanisms that use two different gates for entry and release", Dr. Dirk Slotboom says.
Dr. Cristina Paulino: "This observation is of great fundamental interest, but also has potential implications for drug design. A prominent consequence of the one-gate elevator mechanism is that large protein movements take place in the cell membrane during transport." Therefore, lipids (the molecules of which the cell membrane is built) are likely to affect the workings of the protein. Indeed, the authors find many lipid-like molecules associated with the protein, where they occupy cavities on the surface. As these cavities have to be vacated for the elevator to move, small molecules that bind tightly to these sites might have drug-like properties.
Future studies will focus on the hunt for, and characterization of such molecules, which may lead to the development of new anti-cancer drugs in the nearby future.
Alisa A Garaeva, Albert Guskov, Dirk J Slotboom, Cristina Paulino.
A one-gate elevator mechanism for the human neutral amino acid transporter ASCT2.
Nature Communicationsvolume 10, Article number: 3427 (2019). doi: 10.1038/s41467-019-11363-x.