A sugar-specific porin, ScrY, is involved in sucrose uptake in enteric bacteria.

Article Details

Citation

Schmid K, Ebner R, Jahreis K, Lengeler JW, Titgemeyer F

A sugar-specific porin, ScrY, is involved in sucrose uptake in enteric bacteria.

Mol Microbiol. 1991 Apr;5(4):941-50.

PubMed ID
1649946 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

During the molecular analysis of a plasmid-coded sucrose metabolic pathway of enteric bacteria, a gene, scrY, was found whose product, ScrY, had all the properties of a bacterial porin (Schmid et al., 1988). Loss of this protein (Mr 58 kDa), localized in the outer membrane, led, as shown here, to an increase in the apparent Km for sucrose transport in whole cells from 10 microM in wild-type cells to 300 microM in mutant cells. This contrasts with the Km for sucrose phosphorylation as measured in membrane vesicles from mutant and wild-type cells, which remained unchanged at about 10 microM, and reflects the activity of the sucrose-specific Enzymell of the phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent carbohydrate:phosphotransferase system (PTS) responsible for uptake through the inner membrane. Furthermore, the presence of ScrY restored growth on maltodextrins in cells devoid of LamB, thus complementing the lack of this maltoporin. The amino acid sequence deduced from the DNA sequence was determined for the plasmid-coded and the ScrY porin coded in the chromosome of Klebsiella pneumoniae. Both show high identity (86%) to each other, and to the channel domain of LamB, further corroborating the conclusion that they constitute porins.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Sucrose porinP22340Details