Figure 1.
Stereo view of the electron density map of the MtrD efflux pump at a resolution of 3.53 Å.
(a) The electron density map contoured at 1.2 σ is in blue. The Cα traces of MtrD are in red. (b) Representative section of the electron density at the interface between TM11 and TM12 of MtrD. The electron density (colored white) is contoured at the 1.2 σ level and superimposed with the final refined model (green, carbon; red, oxygen; blue, nitrogen).
Figure 2.
Structure of the N. gonorrhoeae MtrD efflux pump.
(a) Ribbon diagram of a protomer of MtrD viewed in the membrane plane. The molecule is colored using a rainbow gradient from the N-terminus (blue) to the C-terminus (red). Sub-domains DN, DC, PN2, PC1 and PC2 are labeled. The location of PN1 is behind PN2, PC1 and PC2. (b) Ribbon diagram of the MtrD trimer viewed in the membrane plane. Each subunit of MtrD is labeled with a different color. Residues 917–927 (only found in MtrD) forming the upper portion of TM9 and the loop connecting TM9 and TM10 are in blue color.
Table 1.
Data collection and refinement statistics.
Figure 3.
Sequence and topology of MtrD, AcrB and MexB.
Alignment of the amino acid sequences of MtrD, AcrB and MexB were done using CLUSTAL W (*, identical residues; :, >60% homologous residues). Secondary structural elements are indicated: TM, transmembrane helix; Nα and Nβ, helix and strand, respectively, in the N-terminal half; Cα and Cβ, helix and strand, respectively, in the C-terminal half. The MtrE docking domain is divided into two sub-domains, DN and DC; whereas the pore domain is divided into four sub-domains, PN1, PN2, PC1 and PC2. The sequence and topology of MtrD are shown at the top.
Figure 4.
Spatial arrangement between TM9 and the periplasmic cleft.
TM9 is inclined from the horizontal membrane plane by 54°. The extra feature (yellow), which is only found in the MtrD pump within the family, is located right next the cleft formed by subdomains PC1 and PC2.
Figure 5.
Ion pairs in the transmembrane domain viewed from the cytoplasmic side.
Residues D405 and D406 of TM4 and K948 of TM10 that form ion pairs, which may play an important role in proton translocation, are in green sticks.