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Construction and validation of a homology model of the human voltage-gated proton channel hHV1
Authors:Kethika Kulleperuma  Susan ME Smith  Deri Morgan  Boris Musset  John Holyoake  Nilmadhab Chakrabarti  Vladimir V Cherny  Thomas E DeCoursey  Régis Pomès
Institution:1.Molecular Structure and Function, Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario M5G 1X8, Canada;2.Department of Biochemistry, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario M5S 1A8, Canada;3.Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Emory School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA 30322;4.Department of Molecular Biophysics and Physiology, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL 60612
Abstract:The topological similarity of voltage-gated proton channels (HV1s) to the voltage-sensing domain (VSD) of other voltage-gated ion channels raises the central question of whether HV1s have a similar structure. We present the construction and validation of a homology model of the human HV1 (hHV1). Multiple structural alignment was used to construct structural models of the open (proton-conducting) state of hHV1 by exploiting the homology of hHV1 with VSDs of K+ and Na+ channels of known three-dimensional structure. The comparative assessment of structural stability of the homology models and their VSD templates was performed using massively repeated molecular dynamics simulations in which the proteins were allowed to relax from their initial conformation in an explicit membrane mimetic. The analysis of structural deviations from the initial conformation based on up to 125 repeats of 100-ns simulations for each system reveals structural features consistently retained in the homology models and leads to a consensus structural model for hHV1 in which well-defined external and internal salt-bridge networks stabilize the open state. The structural and electrostatic properties of this open-state model are compatible with proton translocation and offer an explanation for the reversal of charge selectivity in neutral mutants of Asp112. Furthermore, these structural properties are consistent with experimental accessibility data, providing a valuable basis for further structural and functional studies of hHV1. Each Arg residue in the S4 helix of hHV1 was replaced by His to test accessibility using Zn2+ as a probe. The two outermost Arg residues in S4 were accessible to external solution, whereas the innermost one was accessible only to the internal solution. Both modeling and experimental data indicate that in the open state, Arg211, the third Arg residue in the S4 helix in hHV1, remains accessible to the internal solution and is located near the charge transfer center, Phe150.
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