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. 1977 Nov 10;252(21):7657-61.

Studies of the beta-galactoside transporter in inverted membrane vesicles of Escherichia coli. I. Symmetrical facilitated diffusion and proton gradient-coupled transport

  • PMID: 21183
Free article

Studies of the beta-galactoside transporter in inverted membrane vesicles of Escherichia coli. I. Symmetrical facilitated diffusion and proton gradient-coupled transport

J R Lancaster Jr et al. J Biol Chem. .
Free article

Abstract

Facilitated diffusion of [14C]lactose into inverted membrane vesicles of Escherichia coli was measured using HgCl2 as a stopping reagent and polylysine to flocculate the vesicles for filtration. Equilibration of lactose between the internal and external volumes required expression of the y gene of the lac operon and was inhibited by thiodigalactoside or by prior incubation with N-ethylmaleimde or HgCl2. The initial rate of uptake was saturable, with a Kt of 0.95 mM. Counterflow of [14C]lactose was demonstrated in either direction. ATP hydrolysis or respiration drove the efflux of internal lactose. The effect of ATP required addition of F1 coupling factor (ATPase) from E. coli when lactose transport was studied in F1-deficient inverted vesicles. Accumulation of lactose against a concentration gradient was achieved by forming an artificial electrochemical proton gradient consisting of a membrane potential negative inside or a pH gradient basic inside. Addition of ATP inhibited this proton driven uptake showing that it occurred in inverted vesicles. It was concluded that the lactose-proton co-transport protein (M protein) is qualitatively symmetrical with respect to the facilitated diffusion of lactose and the coupling of proton and lactose transport.

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