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Featured researches published by Binghua Wu.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2007

Aquaporins with selectivity for unconventional permeants.

Binghua Wu; Eric Beitz

Abstract.The aquaporin protein family generally seems to be designed for the selective passage of water or glycerol. Charged molecules, metal ions and even protons are strictly excluded. Recently, particular aquaporin isoforms were reported to conduct unconventional permeants, i.e., the unpolar gases carbon dioxide and nitric oxide, the polar gas ammonia, the oxidative oxygen species hydrogen peroxide, and the metalloids antimonite, arsenite and silicic acid. Here, we summarize the available data on permeability properties and physiological settings of these aquaporins and we analyze which structural features might be connected to permeability for non-water, non-glycerol solutes.


FEBS Journal | 2014

Structural determinants of the hydrogen peroxide permeability of aquaporins

Abdulnasser Almasalmeh; Dawid Krenc; Binghua Wu; Eric Beitz

Aquaporins (AQP) conduct small, uncharged molecules, such as water (orthodox AQPs), ammonia (aquaammoniaporins) or glycerol (aquaglyceroporins). The physiological functions of AQPs are involved in osmotic volume regulation or the transport of biochemical precursors and metabolic waste products. The recent identification of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) as a permeant of certain AQPs suggests additional roles in mitigating oxidative stress or enabling paracrine H2O2 signalling. Yet, an analysis of the structural requirements of the H2O2 permeability of AQPs is missing. We subjected a representative set of wild‐type and mutant AQPs to a newly established quantitative phenotypic assay. We confirmed high H2O2 permeability of the human aquaammoniaporin AQP8 and found intermediate H2O2 permeability of the prototypical orthodox water channel AQP1 from the rat. Differences from an earlier report showing an absence of H2O2 permeability of human AQP1 can be explained by expression levels. By generating point mutations in the selectivity filter of rat orthodox aquaporin AQP1, we established a correlation of H2O2 permeability primarily with water permeability and secondarily with the pore diameter. Even the narrowest pore of the test set (i.e. rat orthodox aquaporin AQP1 H180F with a pore diameter smaller than that of natural orthodox AQPs) conducted water and H2O2. We further found that H2O2 permeability of the aquaglyceroporin from the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum was lower despite its wider pore diameter. The data suggest that all water‐permeable AQPs are H2O2 channels, yet H2O2 permeability varies with the isoform. Thus, generally, AQPs must be considered as putative players in situations of oxidative stress (e.g. in Plasmodium‐infected red blood cells, immune cells, the cardiovascular system or cells expressing AQP8 in their mitochondria).


Molecular Microbiology | 2006

Ammonia permeability of the aquaglyceroporins from Plasmodium falciparum, Toxoplasma gondii and Trypansoma brucei.

Thomas Zeuthen; Binghua Wu; Slavica Pavlovic-Djuranovic; Lars Holm; Néstor L. Uzcátegui; Michael Duszenko; Jürgen F. J. Kun; Joachim E. Schultz; Eric Beitz

Plasmodium falciparum uses amino acids from haemoglobin degradation mainly for protein biosynthesis. Glutamine, however, is mostly oxidized to 2‐oxoglutarate to restore NAD(P)H + H+. In this process two molecules of ammonia are released. We determined an ammonia production of 9 mmol h−1 per litre of infected red blood cells in the early trophozoite stage. External application of ammonia yielded a cytotoxic IC50 concentration of 2.8 mM. As plasmodia cannot metabolize ammonia it must be exported. Yet, no biochemical or genomic evidences exist that plasmodia possess classical ammonium transporters. We expressed the P. falciparum aquaglyceroporin (PfAQP) in Xenopus laevis oocytes and examined whether it may serve as an exit pathway for ammonia. We show that injected oocytes: (i) acidify the medium due to ammonia uptake, (ii) take up [14C]methylamine and [14C]formamide, (iii) swell in solution with formamide and acetamide and (iv) display an ammonia‐induced NH4+‐dependent clamp current. Further, a yeast strain lacking the endogenous aquaglyceroporin (Fps1) is rescued by expression of PfAQP which provides for the efflux of toxic methylamine. Ammonia permeability was similarly established for the aquaglyceroporins from Toxoplasma gondii and Trypanosoma brucei. Apparently, these aquaglyceroporins are important for the release of ammonia derived from amino acid breakdown.


The EMBO Journal | 2009

Concerted action of two cation filters in the aquaporin water channel

Binghua Wu; Christina Steinbronn; Magnus Alsterfjord; Thomas Zeuthen; Eric Beitz

Aquaporin (AQP) facilitated water transport is common to virtually all cell membranes and is marked by almost perfect specificity and high flux rates. Simultaneously, protons and cations are strictly excluded to maintain ionic transmembrane gradients. Yet, the AQP cation filters have not been identified experimentally. We report that three point mutations turned the water‐specific AQP1 into a proton/alkali cation channel with reduced water permeability and the permeability sequence: H+ ≫K+ >Rb+ >Na+ >Cs+ >Li+. Contrary to theoretical models, we found that electrostatic repulsion at the central asn‐pro‐ala (NPA) region does not suffice to exclude protons. Full proton exclusion is reached only in conjunction with the aromatic/arginine (ar/R) constriction at the pore mouth. In contrast, alkali cations are blocked by the NPA region but leak through the ar/R constriction. Expression of alkali‐leaking AQPs depolarized membrane potentials and compromised cell survival. Our results hint at the alkali‐tight but solute‐unselective NPA region as a feature of primordial channels and the proton‐tight and solute‐selective ar/R constriction variants as later adaptations within the AQP superfamily.


FEBS Journal | 2011

Requirement for asparagine in the aquaporin NPA sequence signature motifs for cation exclusion

Dorothea Wree; Binghua Wu; Thomas Zeuthen; Eric Beitz

Two highly conserved NPA motifs are a hallmark of the aquaporin (AQP) family. The NPA triplets form N‐terminal helix capping structures with the Asn side chains located in the centre of the water or solute‐conducting channel, and are considered to play an important role in AQP selectivity. Although another AQP selectivity filter site, the aromatic/Arg (ar/R) constriction, has been well characterized by mutational analysis, experimental data concerning the NPA region – in particular, the Asn position – is missing. Here, we report on the cloning and mutational analysis of a novel aquaglyceroporin carrying one SPA motif instead of the NPA motif from Burkholderia cenocepacia, an epidemic pathogen of cystic fibrosis patients. Of 1357 AQP sequences deposited in RefSeq, we identified only 15 with an Asn exchange. Using direct and phenotypic permeability assays, we found that Asn and Ser are freely interchangeable at both NPA sites without affecting protein expression or water, glycerol and methylamine permeability. However, other mutations in the NPA region led to reduced permeability (S186C and S186D), to nonfunctional channels (N64D), or even to lack of protein expression (S186A and S186T). Using electrophysiology, we found that an analogous mammalian AQP1 N76S mutant excluded protons and potassium ions, but leaked sodium ions, providing an argument for the overwhelming prevalence of Asn over other amino acids. We conclude that, at the first position in the NPA motifs, only Asn provides efficient helix cap stabilization and cation exclusion, whereas other small residues compromise structural stability or cation exclusion but not necessarily water and solute permeability.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Novel Channel Enzyme Fusion Proteins Confer Arsenate Resistance

Binghua Wu; Jie Song; Eric Beitz

Steady exposure to environmental arsenic has led to the evolution of vital cellular detoxification mechanisms. Under aerobic conditions, a two-step process appears most common among microorganisms involving reduction of predominant, oxidized arsenate (H2AsVO4−/HAsVO42−) to arsenite (AsIII(OH)3) by a cytosolic enzyme (ArsC; Escherichia coli type arsenate reductase) and subsequent extrusion via ArsB (E. coli type arsenite transporter)/ACR3 (yeast type arsenite transporter). Here, we describe novel fusion proteins consisting of an aquaglyceroporin-derived arsenite channel with a C-terminal arsenate reductase domain of phosphotyrosine-phosphatase origin, providing transposable, single gene-encoded arsenate resistance. The fusion occurred in actinobacteria from soil, Frankia alni, and marine environments, Salinispora tropica; Mycobacterium tuberculosis encodes an analogous ACR3-ArsC fusion. Mutations rendered the aquaglyceroporin channel more polar resulting in lower glycerol permeability and enhanced arsenite selectivity. The arsenate reductase domain couples to thioredoxin and can complement arsenate-sensitive yeast strains. A second isoform with a nonfunctional channel may use the mycothiol/mycoredoxin cofactor pool. These channel enzymes constitute prototypes of a novel concept in metabolism in which a substrate is generated and compartmentalized by the same molecule. Immediate diffusion maintains the dynamic equilibrium and prevents toxic accumulation of metabolites in an energy-saving fashion.


Nature Communications | 2015

Identity of a Plasmodium lactate/H+ symporter structurally unrelated to human transporters

Binghua Wu; Janis Rambow; Sinja Bock; Julia Holm-Bertelsen; Marie Wiechert; Alexandra Blancke Soares; Tobias Spielmann; Eric Beitz

Maintenance of a high glycolytic flow rate is critical for the rapid growth and virulence of malarial parasites. The parasites release two moles of lactic acid per mole of glucose as the anaerobic end product. However, the molecular identity of the Plasmodium lactate transporter is unknown. Here we show that a member of the microbial formate-nitrite transporter family, PfFNT, acts as a lactate/proton symporter in Plasmodium falciparum. Besides L-lactate, PfFNT transports physiologically relevant D-lactate, as well as pyruvate, acetate and formate, and is inhibited by the antiplasmodial compounds phloretin, furosemide and cinnamate derivatives, but not by p-chloromercuribenzene sulfonate (pCMBS). Our data on PfFNT monocarboxylate transport are consistent with those obtained with living parasites. Moreover, PfFNT is the only transporter of the plasmodial glycolytic pathway for which structure information is available from crystals of homologous proteins, rendering it amenable to further evaluation as a novel antimalarial drug target.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2014

Parasite aquaporins: Current developments in drug facilitation and resistance☆

Jie Song; Ellen Mak; Binghua Wu; Eric Beitz

BACKGROUND Although being situated in a niche, research on parasite aquaporins is a lively field that has provided new insight into basic aquaporin structure-function relationships and physiological roles of water and solute transport. Moreover, it bears the potential to find novel approaches to antiparasitic chemotherapy. SCOPE OF REVIEW Here, we summarize the current knowledge about the structure and substrate selectivity of aquaporins from protozoan and helminth parasites, review the current views on their physiological roles, and discuss their potency for chemotherapy. MAJOR CONCLUSIONS Parasite aquaporins fulfill highly diverse tasks in the physiology of the various organisms, yet their general protein structure is well conserved. Aquaporins are directly (antimonials) and indirectly (melarsoprol, pentamidine) linked to the uptake of antiparasitic drugs. Unfortunately, drug-like aquaporin inhibitors are still missing. GENERAL SIGNIFICANCE Aquaporins expression levels determine the degree of parasite resistance against certain drugs. Further studies on parasite aquaporins may provide data about overcoming drug resistance mechanisms or even spark novel treatments. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Aquaporins.


Frontiers in Pharmacology | 2014

Aquaporins with anion/monocarboxylate permeability: mechanisms, relevance for pathogen–host interactions

Janis Rambow; Binghua Wu; Deike Rönfeldt; Eric Beitz

Classically, aquaporins are divided based on pore selectivity into water specific, orthodox aquaporins and solute-facilitating aquaglyceroporins, which conduct, e.g., glycerol and urea. However, more aquaporin-passing substrates have been identified over the years, such as the gasses ammonia and carbon dioxide or the water-related hydrogen peroxide. It became apparent that not all aquaporins clearly fit into one of only two subfamilies. Furthermore, certain aquaporins from both major subfamilies have been reported to conduct inorganic anions, such as chloride, or monoacids/monocarboxylates, such as lactic acid/lactate. Here, we summarize the findings on aquaporin anion transport, analyze the pore layout of such aquaporins in comparison to prototypical non-selective anion channels, monocarboxylate transporters, and formate–nitrite transporters. Finally, we discuss in which scenarios anion conducting aquaporins may be of physiological relevance.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Fluorescent In Situ Folding Control for Rapid Optimization of Cell-Free Membrane Protein Synthesis

Annika Müller-Lucks; Sinja Bock; Binghua Wu; Eric Beitz

Cell-free synthesis is an open and powerful tool for high-yield protein production in small reaction volumes predestined for high-throughput structural and functional analysis. Membrane proteins require addition of detergents for solubilization, liposomes, or nanodiscs. Hence, the number of parameters to be tested is significantly higher than with soluble proteins. Optimization is commonly done with respect to protein yield, yet without knowledge of the protein folding status. This approach contains a large inherent risk of ending up with non-functional protein. We show that fluorophore formation in C-terminal fusions with green fluorescent protein (GFP) indicates the folding state of a membrane protein in situ, i.e. within the cell-free reaction mixture, as confirmed by circular dichroism (CD), proteoliposome reconstitution and functional assays. Quantification of protein yield and in-gel fluorescence intensity imply suitability of the method for membrane proteins of bacterial, protozoan, plant, and mammalian origin, representing vacuolar and plasma membrane localization, as well as intra- and extracellular positioning of the C-terminus. We conclude that GFP-fusions provide an extension to cell-free protein synthesis systems eliminating the need for experimental folding control and, thus, enabling rapid optimization towards membrane protein quality.

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Thomas Zeuthen

University of Copenhagen

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