Transport across the bacterial outer membrane
- PMID: 8144487
- DOI: 10.1007/BF00770245
Transport across the bacterial outer membrane
Abstract
Diffusion of small molecules across the outer membrane of gram-negative bacteria may occur through protein channels and through lipid bilayer domains. Among protein channels, many examples of trimeric porins, which produce water-filled diffusion channels, are known. Although the channels are nonspecific, the diffusion rates of solutes are often drastically affected by their gross physicochemical properties, such as size, charge, or lipophilicity, because the channel has a dimension not too different from that of the diffusing solutes. In the last few years, the structures of three such porins have been solved by X-ray crystallography. It is now known that a monomer unit traverses the membrane 16 times as beta-strands, and one of the external loop folds back into the channel to produce a narrow constriction. Most of the static properties of the channel, such as the pore size and the position of the amino acids that produce the constriction, can now be explained by the three-dimensional structure. Controversy, however, still surrounds the issue of whether there are dynamic modulation of the channel properties in response to pH, ionic strength, or membrane potential, and of whether such responses are physiological. More recently, two examples of monomeric porins have been identified. These porins allow a very slow diffusion of solutes, but the reason for this low permeability is still unclear. Finally, channels with specific binding sites facilitate the diffusion of specific classes of nutrients, often those compounds that are too large to penetrate rapidly through the porin channels.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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