EMD-32767

Single-particle
2.9 Å
EMD-32767 Deposition: 01/02/2022
Map released: 30/11/2022
Last modified: 23/10/2024
Overview 3D View Sample Experiment Validation Volume Browser Additional data Links
Overview 3D View Sample Experiment Validation Volume Browser Additional data Links

EMD-32767

Cryo-EM structure of the barley Yellow stripe 1 transporter in complex with Fe(III)-PDMA

EMD-32767

Single-particle
2.9 Å
EMD-32767 Deposition: 01/02/2022
Map released: 30/11/2022
Last modified: 23/10/2024
Overview 3D View Sample Experiment Validation Volume Browser Additional data Links
Sample Organism: Hordeum vulgare
Sample: Yellow stripe 1 in the apo state
Fitted models: 7wsu (Avg. Q-score: 0.561)

Deposition Authors: Yamagata A
Uptake mechanism of iron-phytosiderophore from the soil based on the structure of yellow stripe transporter.
Yamagata A , Murata Y , Namba K , Terada T , Fukai S , Shirouzu M
(2022) Nat Commun , 13 , 7180 - 7180
PUBMED: 36424382
DOI: doi:10.1038/s41467-022-34930-1
ISSN: 2041-1723
Abstract:
Calcareous soils cover one-third of all land and cause severe growth defects in plants due to the poor water solubility of iron at high pH. Poaceae species use a unique chelation strategy, whereby plants secrete a high-affinity metal chelator, known as phytosiderophores (mugineic acids), and reabsorb the iron-phytosiderophore complex by the yellow stripe 1/yellow stripe 1-like (YS1/YSL) transporter for efficient uptake of iron from the soil. Here, we present three cryo-electron microscopy structures of barley YS1 (HvYS1) in the apo state, in complex with an iron-phytosiderophore complex, Fe(III)-deoxymugineic acid (Fe(III)-DMA), and in complex with the iron-bound synthetic DMA analog (Fe(III)-PDMA). The structures reveal a homodimeric assembly mediated through an anti-parallel β-sheet interaction with cholesterol hemisuccinate. Each protomer adopts an outward open conformation, and Fe(III)-DMA is bound near the extracellular space in the central cavity. Fe(III)-PDMA occupies the same binding site as Fe(III)-DMA, demonstrating that PDMA can function as a potent fertilizer in an essentially identical manner to DMA. Our results provide a structural framework for iron-phytosiderophore recognition and transport by YS1/YSL transporters, which will enable the rational design of new, high-potency fertilizers.