Function
9W1N captures SLC37A4 in its lumen-facing, substrate-free conformation, representing the starting point of the G6P/Pi exchange cycle.
The central cavity is open toward the ER lumen and sealed on the cytosolic side, consistent with a transporter ready to release Pi or to bind luminal factors.
This state provides the template for how the transporter organises a pre-formed phosphate pocket before substrate binds.
Disease
9W1N reveals the positions of conserved Lys/His residues (K29, K64, H366) forming the phosphate-binding hotspot; many GSD-Ib mutations map directly onto this region.
The apo structure reveals how even small perturbations of the substrate cavity or cytoplasmic gate can disrupt the correct lumen-open geometry, explaining loss-of-function phenotypes.
Several pathogenic variants cluster at the dimer interface surfaces, clearly visualised in 9W1N.
Relevance
9W1N is the reference architecture for all other SLC37A4 structures, Pi-bound (9W1O), G6P-bound (9W1P), lateral dimers, and the inhibitor-bound cytosol-open state (9W1R).
It defines the resting, lumen-open gate essential for understanding how substrates gain access to the ER-facing cavity, how is antiport asymmetry maintained and which structural elements move during transport.
Serves as a baseline for comparing disease mutations, substrate recognition, and inhibitor locking.
Structural highlights
State captured is apo, lumen-facing, antiparallel dimer (C2 symmetry). Resolution: ~3.2 Å cryo-EM, allowing accurate visualisation of the central cavity, gates, and conserved charged residues.
It has a unique dimer architecture, with antiparallel packing of the two protomers. The interface is tight but still allows for large-scale rearrangements, as seen in lateral dimers.
Cavity features are that it has a positively charged, pre-shaped phosphate pocket despite the absence of a ligand. The residues K29, K64, M145, and H366 are positioned for immediate substrate coordination.
The cytosolic gate has closed-TM helices pack to block access. The luminal gate is open, showing a clear solvent-accessible path. This represents the lumen-access state in the alternating-access cycle.
It also serves as the structural endpoint opposite the cytosol-open inhibitor-bound structure (9W1R).
Summary
PDB 9W1N captures human SLC37A4, the ER-membrane glucose-6-phosphate/phosphate antiporter, in its apo, lumen-facing conformation. In this state, the transporter forms a distinctive antiparallel C2-symmetric dimer, with a solvent-accessible cavity open toward the ER lumen and a tightly packed cytosolic gate that prevents access from the cytoplasm.
Although it is not with a ligand, 9W1N reveals a pre-organized, positively charged substrate pocket, built around conserved residues such as K29, K64, M145, and H366, which later coordinate phosphate or glucose-6-phosphate in the substrate-bound structures. This apo structure provides the reference architecture for all other functional states, defining the start of the alternating-access transport cycle.
It also helps explain how pathogenic mutations associated with Glycogen Storage Disease type Ib disrupt substrate binding, gating, or proper dimer formation. As the baseline lumen-open state, 9W1N is central for understanding the mechanistic transitions, substrate recognition, and disease impacts in SLC37A4.
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