Excitatory amino acid transporters (EAATs) serve to maintain extracellular neurotransmitter concentrations below neurotoxic levels by transporting glutamate from the synaptic cleft into apposed glia and neurons. Although the crystal structures of the archaeal EAAT homologue from , Glt, and the human glutamate transporter, EAAT1, have been resolved, the transport mechanism of the transmembrane 3-4 (TM3-4) loop and its structural rearrangement during transport have remained poorly understood. In order to explore the spatial position and function of the TM3-4 loop in the transport cycle, we engineered a pair of cysteine residues between the TM3-4 loop and hairpin loop 2 (HP2) in cysteine-less EAAT2 (CL-EAAT2). We observed that the oxidative cross-linking reagent Cu(II)(1,10-phenanthroline) (CuPh) had a significant inhibitory effect on transport in the disubstituted A167C/G437C mutant, whereas dl-dithiothreitol (DTT) reversed the effect of cross-linking A167C/G437C on transport activity, as assayed by d-[H]-aspartate uptake. Furthermore, we found that the effect of CuPh in this mutant was due to the formation of disulfide bonds in the transporter molecule. Moreover, dl-threo-β-benzyloxyaspartic acid (TBOA) attenuated, while l-glutamate or KCl enhanced, the CuPh-mediated inhibitory effect in the A167C/G437C mutant, suggesting that the A167C and G437C cysteines were farther apart in the outward-facing configuration and closer in the inward-facing configuration. Taken together, our findings provide evidence that the TM3-4 loop and HP2 change spatial proximity during the transport cycle.

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