
Gram Negative Outer Membrane Structure
The outer membrane of the Gram negative bacteria provides a protective
barrier to hydrophobic and amphophilic, deleterious compounds, including certain
classes of antibiotics. A unique glycolipid, lipopolysaccharide, present on the
outer surface of this membrane provides part of this protective barrier. Using
various techniques, we have investigated the heterogeneity and the composition
of the lipopolysaccharides present on different strains of Gram negative
bacteria. We have evidence that some species synthesize two chemically distinct
classes of lipopolysaccharide with different antigenic reactivity. We have begun
to analyze the structural differences of these distinct classes.
Although the outer membrane is relatively impermeable to hydrophobic compounds, it allows passive transport of small hydrophilic molecules. Nutrient and waste compounds must be able to traverse the outer membrane; a class of integral membrane proteins, the porins, form water-filled channels that allow passive diffusion across this membrane. We have analyzed the structure of isolated porins and their function as diffusion channels. By inserting the proteins into artificial membranes, the diffusion of small molecules across the membranes have been measured. Our initial studies have shown that changes in environmental conditions modify the structure of the porin channel, altering its size and the stability of the open state. Our studies suggest that there may be more than one stable open conformation. Molecular modelling analyses of the crystallographically determined structure of the porin is helping us define residues within the channel which stabilize specific conformations. The involvement of such residues will be tested by site-directed mutagenesis.
Rivera, M., Chivers, T.R., Lam, J.C. and McGroarty, E.J. (1992) Common antigen lipopolysaccharide from Pseudomonas aeruginosa AK1401 as a receptor for bacteriophage A7. Journal of Bacteriology 174, 2407-2411.
Todt, J.C. and McGroarty, E.J. (1992) Effects of pH on bacterial porin structure. Involvement of HIS21 in a pH induced conformational change. Biochemistry 31, 10479-10482.