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Effect of high hydrostatic pressure on the bacterial mechanosensitive channel MscS
Authors:A. G. Macdonald  B. Martinac
Affiliation:(1) Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, AB25 2ZD, UK;(2) School of Medicine and Pharmacology, Queen Elizabeth II Medical Center, University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA, 6009, Australia;(3) Present address: School of Biomedical Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, 4072, Australia
Abstract:We have investigated the effect of high hydrostatic pressure on MscS, the bacterial mechanosensitive channel of small conductance. Pressure affected channel kinetics but not conductance. At negative pipette voltages (corresponding to membrane depolarization in the inside-out patch configuration used in our experiments) the channel exhibited a reversible reduction in activity with increasing hydrostatic pressure between 0 and 900 atm (90 MPa) at 23°C. The reduced activity was characterized by a significant reduction in the channel opening probability resulting from a shortening of the channel openings with increasing pressure. Thus high hydrostatic pressure generally favoured channel closing. Cooling the patch by approximately 10°C, intended to order the bilayer component of the patch by an amount similar to that caused by 50 MPa at 23°C, had relatively little effect. This implies that pressure does not affect channel kinetics via bilayer order. Accordingly we postulate that lateral compression of the bilayer, under high hydrostatic pressure, is responsible. These observations also have implications for our understanding of the adaptation of mechanosensitive channels in deep-sea bacteria.A Proceeding of the 28th Annual Meeting of the Australian Society for Biophysics.
Keywords:Ion channels  Mechanosensitivity  Bacteria  Patch clamp  Hydrostatic pressure
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