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Exploration of the structural features defining the conduction properties of a synthetic ion channel.
Authors:G R Dieckmann  J D Lear  Q Zhong  M L Klein  W F DeGrado  and K A Sharp
Abstract:The finite-difference Poisson-Boltzmann methodology was applied to a series of parallel, alpha-helical bundle models of the designed ion channel peptide Ac-(LSSLLSL)3-CONH2. This method is able to fully describe the current-voltage curves for this channel and quantitatively explains their cation selectivity and rectification. We examined a series of energy-minimized models representing different aggregation states, side-chain rotamers, and helical rotations, as well as an ensemble of structures from a molecular dynamics trajectory. Potential energies were computed for single, permeating K+ and Cl- ions at a series of positions along a central pathway through the models. A variable-electric-field Nernst-Planck electrodiffusion model was used, with two adjustable parameters representing the diffusion coefficients of K+ and Cl- to scale the individual ion current magnitudes. The ability of a given DelPhi potential profile to fit the experimental data depended strongly on the magnitude of the desolvation of the permeating ion. Below a pore radius of 3.8 A, the predicted profiles showed large energy barriers, and the experimental data could be fit only with unrealistically high values for the K+ and Cl- diffusion coefficients. For pore radii above 3.8 A, the desolvation energies were 2kT or less. The electrostatic calculations were sensitive to positioning of the Ser side chains, with the best fits associated with maximum exposure of the Ser side-chain hydroxyls to the pore. The backbone component was shown to be the major source of asymmetry in the DelPhi potential profiles. Only two of the energy-minimized structures were able to explain the experimental data, whereas an average of the dynamics structures gave excellent agreement with experimental results. Thus this method provides a promising approach to prediction of current-voltage curves from three-dimensional structures of ion channel proteins.
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