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1.
The voltage-gated Na+ channel of Bacillus halodurans (NaChBac) is composed of six transmembrane segments (S1–S6), with a pore-forming region composed of segments S5 and S6 and a voltage-sensing domain composed of segments S1–S4. The S4 segment forms the core of the voltage sensor. We explored the accessibility of four arginine residues on the S4 segment of NaChBac, which are positioned at every third position from each other. These arginine residues on the S4 segment were replaced with cysteines using site-directed mutagenesis. Na+ currents were recorded using the whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp technique. We tested the effect of the sulfhydryl reagents applied from inside and outside the cellular space in the open and closed conformations. Structural models of the voltage sensor of NaChBac were constructed based on the recently crystallized KvAP and Kv1.2 K+ channels to visualize arginine residue accessibility. Our results suggest that arginine accessibility did not change significantly between the open and closed conformations, supporting the idea of a small movement of the S4 segment during gating. Molecular modeling of the closed conformation also supported a small movement of S4, which is mainly characterized by a rotation and a tilt along the periphery of the pore. Interestingly, the second arginine residue of the S4 segment (R114) was accessible to sulfhydryl reagents from both sides of the membrane in the closed conformation and, based on our model, seemed to be at the junction of the intracellular and extracellular water crevices.  相似文献   

2.
Models of the transmembrane region of the NaChBac channel were developed in two open/inactivated and several closed conformations. Homology models of NaChBac were developed using crystal structures of Kv1.2 and a Kv1.2/2.1 chimera as templates for open conformations, and MlotiK and KcsA channels as templates for closed conformations. Multiple molecular-dynamic simulations were performed to refine and evaluate these models. A striking difference between the S4 structures of the Kv1.2-like open models and MlotiK-like closed models is the secondary structure. In the open model, the first part of S4 forms an α-helix, and the last part forms a 310 helix, whereas in the closed model, the first part of S4 forms a 310 helix, and the last part forms an α-helix. A conformational change that involves this type of transition in secondary structure should be voltage-dependent. However, this transition alone is not sufficient to account for the large gating charge movement reported for NaChBac channels and for experimental results in other voltage-gated channels. To increase the magnitude of the motion of S4, we developed another model of an open/inactivated conformation, in which S4 is displaced farther outward, and a number of closed models in which S4 is displaced farther inward. A helical screw motion for the α-helical part of S4 and a simple axial translation for the 310 portion were used to develop models of these additional conformations. In our models, four positively charged residues of S4 moved outwardly during activation, across a transition barrier formed by highly conserved hydrophobic residues on S1, S2, and S3. The S4 movement was coupled to an opening of the activation gate formed by S6 through interactions with the segment linking S4 to S5. Consistencies of our models with experimental studies of NaChBac and Kv channels are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The NaChBac prokaryotic sodium channel appears to be a descendent of an evolutionary link between voltage-gated KV and CaV channels. Like KV channels, four identical six-transmembrane subunits comprise the NaChBac channel, but its selectivity filter possesses a signature sequence of eukaryotic CaV channels. We developed structural models of the NaChBac channel in closed and open conformations, using K+-channel crystal structures as initial templates. Our models were also consistent with numerous experimental results and modeling criteria. This study concerns the pore domain. The major differences between our models and K+ crystal structures involve the latter portion of the selectivity filter and the bend region in S6 of the open conformation. These NaChBac models may serve as a stepping stone between K+ channels of known structure and NaV, CaV, and TRP channels of unknown structure.  相似文献   

4.
The NaChBac sodium channel from Bacillus halodurans is a homologue of eukaryotic voltage-gated sodium channels. It can be solubilized in a range of detergents and consists of four identical subunits assembled as a tetramer. Sodium channels are relatively flexible molecules, adopting different conformations in their closed, open and inactivated states. This study aimed to design and construct a mutant version of the NaChBac protein that would insert into membranes and retain its folded conformation, but which would have enhanced stability when subjected to thermal stress. Modelling studies suggested a G219S mutant would have decreased conformational flexibility due to the removal of the glycine hinge around the proposed gating region, thereby imparting increased resistance to unfolding. The mutant expressed in Escherichia coli and purified in the detergent dodecyl maltoside was compared to wildtype NaChBac prepared in a similar manner. The mutant was incorporated into the membrane fraction and had a nearly identical secondary structure to the wildtype protein. When the thermal unfolding of the G219S mutant was examined by circular dichroism spectroscopy, it was shown to not only have a Tm approximately 10 degrees C higher than the wildtype, but also in its unfolded state it retained more ordered helical structure than did the wildtype protein. Hence the G219S mutant was shown to be, as designed, more thermally stable.  相似文献   

5.
The NaChBac sodium channel from Bacillus halodurans is a homologue of eukaryotic voltage-gated sodium channels. It can be solubilized in a range of detergents and consists of four identical subunits assembled as a tetramer. Sodium channels are relatively flexible molecules, adopting different conformations in their closed, open and inactivated states. This study aimed to design and construct a mutant version of the NaChBac protein that would insert into membranes and retain its folded conformation, but which would have enhanced stability when subjected to thermal stress. Modelling studies suggested a G219S mutant would have decreased conformational flexibility due to the removal of the glycine hinge around the proposed gating region, thereby imparting increased resistance to unfolding. The mutant expressed in Escherichia coli and purified in the detergent dodecyl maltoside was compared to wildtype NaChBac prepared in a similar manner. The mutant was incorporated into the membrane fraction and had a nearly identical secondary structure to the wildtype protein. When the thermal unfolding of the G219S mutant was examined by circular dichroism spectroscopy, it was shown to not only have a Tm ~10°C higher than the wildtype, but also in its unfolded state it retained more ordered helical structure than did the wildtype protein. Hence the G219S mutant was shown to be, as designed, more thermally stable.  相似文献   

6.
The voltage sensor is a four-transmembrane helix bundle (S1-S4) that couples changes in membrane potential to conformational alterations in voltage-gated ion channels leading to pore opening and ion conductance. Although the structure of the voltage sensor in activated potassium channels is available, the conformation of the voltage sensor at rest is still obscure, limiting our understanding of the voltage-sensing mechanism. By employing a heterologously expressed Bacillus halodurans sodium channel (NaChBac), we defined constraints that affect the positioning and depolarization-induced outward motion of the S4 segment. We compared macroscopic currents mediated by NaChBac and mutants in which E43 on the S1 segment and the two outermost arginines (R1 and R2) on S4 were substituted. Neutralization of the negatively charged E43 (E43C) had a significant effect on channel gating. A double-mutant cycle analysis of E43 and R1 or R2 suggested changes in pairing during channel activation, implying that the interaction of E43 with R1 stabilizes the voltage sensor in its closed/available state, whereas interaction of E43 with R2 stabilizes the channel open/unavailable state. These constraints on S4 dynamics that define its stepwise movement upon channel activation and positioning at rest are novel, to the best of our knowledge, and compatible with the helical-screw and electrostatic models of S4 motion.  相似文献   

7.
The one-domain voltage-gated sodium channel of Bacillus halodurans (NaChBac) is composed of six transmembrane segments (S1–S6) comprising a pore-forming region flanked by segments S5 and S6 and a voltage-sensing element composed of segment S4. To investigate the role of the S4 segment in NaChBac channel activation, we used the cysteine mutagenesis approach where the positive charges of single and multiple arginine (R) residues of the S4 segment were replaced by the neutrally charged amino acid cysteine (C). To determine whether it was the arginine residue itself or its positive charge that was involved in channel activation, arginine to lysine (R to K) mutations were constructed. Wild-type (WT) and mutant NaChBac channels were expressed in tsA201 cells and Na+ currents were recorded using the whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp technique. The current/voltage (I-V) and conductance/voltage (G-V) relationships steady-state inactivation (h ) and recovery from inactivation were evaluated to determine the effects of the S4 mutations on the biophysical properties of the NaChBac channel. R to C on the S4 segment resulted in a slowing of both activation and inactivation kinetics. Charge neutralization of arginine residues mostly resulted in a shift toward more positive potentials of G-V and h curves. The G-V curve shifts were associated with a decrease in slope, which may reflect a decrease in the gating charge involved in channel activation. Single neutralization of R114, R117, or R120 by C resulted in a very slow recovery from inactivation. Double neutralization of R111 and R129 confirmed the role of R111 in activation and suggested that R129 is most probably not part of the voltage sensor. Most of the R to K mutants retained WT-like current kinetics but exhibited an intermediate G-V curve, a steady-state inactivation shifted to more hyperpolarized potentials, and intermediate time constants of recovery from inactivation. This indicates that R, at several positions, plays an important role in channel activation. The data are consistent with the notion that the S4 is most probably the voltage sensor of the NaChBac channel and that both positive charges and the nature of the arginine residues are essential for channel activation.This revised version was published online in June 2005 with a corrected cover date.  相似文献   

8.
Structure of the Ca channel open pore is unlikely to be the same as that of the K channel because Ca channels do not contain the hinge residues Gly or Pro. The Ca channel does not have a wide entry into the inner pore, as is found in K channels. First we sought to simulate the open state of the Ca channel by modeling forced opening of the KcsA channel using a procedure of restrained minimization with distance constraints at the level of the α-helical bundle, corresponding to segments Thr-107-Val-115. This produced an intermediate open state, which was populated by amino acid residues of Ca channels and then successively optimized until the opening of the pore reached a diameter of about 10 Å, large enough to allow verapamil to enter and block the Ca channel from inside. Although this approach produced a sterically plausible structure, it was in significant disagreement with the MTSET accessibility data for single cysteine mutations of S6 segments of the P/Q channel1 that do not fit with an α-helical pattern. Last we explored the idea that the four S6 segments of Ca channels may contain intra-molecular deformations that lead to reorientation of its side chains. After introduction of ≠-bulges, the model agreed with the MTSET accessibility data. MTSET modification of a cysteine at the C-end of only one S6 could produce physical occlusion and block of the inner pore of the open Ca channel, as observed experimentally, and as expected if the pore opening is narrower than that of K channels.  相似文献   

9.
Voltage-gated sodium channels are members of a large family with similar pore structures. The mechanism of opening and closing is unknown, but structural studies suggest gating via bending of the inner pore helix at a glycine hinge. Here we provide functional evidence for this gating model for the bacterial sodium channel NaChBac. Mutation of glycine 219 to proline, which would strongly favor bending of the alpha helix, greatly enhances activation by shifting its voltage dependence -51 mV and slowing deactivation by 2000-fold. The mutation also slows voltage-dependent inactivation by 1200-fold. The effects are specific because substitutions of proline at neighboring positions and substitutions of other amino acids at position 219 have much smaller functional effects. Our results fit a model in which concerted bending at glycine 219 in the S6 segments of NaChBac serves as a gating hinge. This gating motion may be conserved in most members of this large ion channel protein family.  相似文献   

10.
We have studied the structure and properties of a bundle of alpha-helical peptides embedded in a 1,2-dimyristoyl-3-phosphatidylcholine phospholipid bilayer by molecular dynamics simulations. The bundle of five transmembrane deltaM2 segments constitutes the model for the pore region of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor, which is the neurotransmitter-gated ion-channel responsible for the fast propagation of electrical signals between cells at the nerve-muscle synapse. The deltaM2 segments were shown to oligomerize in biomembranes resulting in ion-channel activity with characteristics similar to the native protein, and the structure of the isolated peptides was studied in 1,2-dimyristoyl-3-phosphatidylcholine bilayers and micelles by NMR experiments (Opella, S. J., et al. 1999. Nat. Struct. Biol. 6:374-379). Our analyses indicate that the structure, helix tilt, and the overall shape of the channel are in good agreement with the NMR experiments and the proposed model for the channel, which we show is formed by rings of functional residues. The studied geometry resulted in a closed pore state, where the channel is partially dehydrated at the hydrophobic extracellular half and the extracellular mouth of the channel blocked by the hydrocarbon chains of Arg+ residues. The arginine amino acids form intermolecular salt-bridges with the C-terminus, which contribute as well to the bundle stabilization.  相似文献   

11.
The opening of ion channels is proposed to arise from bending of the pore inner helices that enables them to pivot away from the central axis creating a cytosolic opening for ion diffusion. The flexibility of the inner helices is suggested to occur either at a conserved glycine located adjacent to the selectivity filter (glycine gating hinge) and/or at a second site occupied by glycine or proline containing motifs. Sequence alignment with other K+ channels shows that hERG possesses glycine residues (Gly648 and Gly657) at each of these putative hinge sites. In apparent contrast to the hinge hypotheses, substitution of both glycine residues for alanine causes little effect on either the voltage-dependence or kinetics of channel activation, and open state block by intracellular blockers. Substitution of the glycines with larger hydrophobic residues causes a greater propensity for the channel to open. We propose that in contrast to Shaker the pore of hERG is intrinsically more stable in the open than the closed conformation and that substitution at Gly648 or Gly657 further shifts the gating equilibrium to favor the open state. Molecular dynamics simulations indicate the S6 helices of hERG are inherently flexible, even in the absence of the glycine residues. Thus hERG activation gating exhibits important differences to other Kv channels. Our findings indicate that the hERG inner helix glycine residues are required for the tight packing of the channel helices and that the flexibility afforded by glycine or proline residues is not universally required for activation gating.  相似文献   

12.
Structure of the Ca channel open pore is unlikely to be the same as that of the K channel because Ca channels do not contain the hinge residues Gly or Pro. The Ca channel does not have a wide entry into the inner pore, as is found in K channels. First we sought to simulate the open state of the Ca channel by modeling forced opening of the KcsA channel using a procedure of restrained minimization with distance constraints at the level of the α-helical bundle, corresponding to segments Thr-107-Val-115. This produced an intermediate open state, which was populated by amino acid residues of Ca channels and then successively optimized until the opening of the pore reached a diameter of about 10 Å, large enough to allow verapamil to enter and block the Ca channel from inside. Although this approach produced a sterically plausible structure, it was in significant disagreement with the MTSET accessibility data for single cysteine mutations of S6 segments of the P/Q channel1 that do not fit with an α-helical pattern. Last we explored the idea that the four S6 segments of Ca channels may contain intra-molecular deformations that lead to reorientation of its side chains. After introduction of π-bulges, the model agreed with the MTSET accessibility data. MTSET modification of a cysteine at the C-end of only one S6 could produce physical occlusion and block of the inner pore of the open Ca channel, as observed experimentally, and as expected if the pore opening is narrower than that of K channels.Key words: calcium channels, homology modeling, π-bulges, restrained minimization  相似文献   

13.
The glycine receptor is a target for both alcohols and anesthetics, and certain amino acids in the alpha1 subunit transmembrane segments (TM) are critical for drug effects. Introducing larger amino acids at these positions increases the potency of glycine, suggesting that introducing larger residues, or drug molecules, into the drug-binding cavity facilitates channel opening. A possible mechanism for these actions is that the volume of the cavity expands and contracts during channel opening and closing. To investigate this hypothesis, mutations for amino acids in TM1 (I229C) and TM2 (G256C, T259C, V260C, M263C, T264C, S267C, S270C) and TM3 (A288C) were individually expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes. The ability of sulfhydryl-specific alkyl methanethiosulfonate (MTS) compounds of different lengths to covalently react with introduced cysteines in both the closed and open states of the receptor was determined. S267C was accessible to short chain (C3-C8) MTS in both open and closed states, but was only accessible to longer chain (C10-C16) MTS compounds in the open state. Reaction with S267C was faster in the open state. I229C and A288C showed state-dependent reaction with MTS only in the presence of agonist. M263C and S270C were also accessible to MTS labeling. Mutated residues more intracellular than M263C did not react, indicating a floor of the cavity. These data demonstrate that the conformational changes accompanying channel gating increase accessibility to amino acids critical for drug action in TM1, TM2, and TM3, which may provide a mechanism by which alcohols and anesthetics can act on glycine (and likely other) receptors.  相似文献   

14.
In this work we address the question of the KCa3.1 channel pore structure in the closed configuration in relation to the contribution of the C-terminal end of the S6 segments to the Ca(2+)-dependent gating process. Our results based on SCAM (substituted cysteine accessibility method) experiments first demonstrate that the S6 transmembrane segment of the open KCa3.1 channel contains two distinct functional domains delimited by V282 with MTSEA and MTSET binding leading to a total channel inhibition at positions V275, T278, and V282 and to a steep channel activation at positions A283 and A286. The rates of modification by MTSEA (diameter 4.6 A) of the 275C (central cavity) and 286C residues (S6 C-terminal end) for the closed channel configuration were found to differ by less than sevenfold, whereas experiments performed with the larger MTSET reagent (diameter 5.8 A) resulted in modification rates 10(3)-10(4) faster for cysteines at 286 compared with 275. Consistent with these results, the modification rates of the cavity lining 275C residue by MTSEA, Et-Hg(+), and Ag(+) appeared poorly state dependent, whereas modification rates by MTSET were 10(3) faster for the open than the closed configuration. A SCAM analysis of the channel inner vestibule in the closed state revealed in addition that cysteine residues at 286 were accessible to MTS reagents as large as MTS-PtrEA, a result supported by the observation that binding of MTSET to cysteines at positions 283 or 286 could neither sterically nor electrostatically block the access of MTSEA to the closed channel cavity (275C). It follows that the closed KCa3.1 structure can hardly be accountable by an inverted teepee-like structure as described for KcsA, but is better represented by a narrow passage centered at V282 (equivalent to V474 in Shaker) connecting the channel central cavity to the cytosolic medium. This passage would not be however restrictive to the diffusion of small reagents such as MTSEA, Et-Hg(+), and Ag(+), arguing against the C-terminal end of S6 forming an obstructive barrier to the diffusion of K(+) ions for the closed channel configuration.  相似文献   

15.
L-type calcium channels (LCCs) are transmembrane (TM) proteins that respond to membrane depolarization by selectively permeating Ca(2+) ions. Dihydropyridine (DHP) agonists and antagonist modulate Ca(2+) permeation by stabilizing, respectively, the open and closed states of the channel. The mechanism of action of these drugs remains unclear. Using, as a template, the crystal structure of the KcsA K(+) channel (Doyle et al. (1998) Science 280, 69-77), we have built several homology models of LCC with alternative alignments of TM segments between the proteins. In each model, nifedipine was docked in the pore region and in the interface between repeats III and IV. Several starting structures were generated by constraining the ligand to residues whose mutations reportedly affect DHP binding (DHP-sensing residues). These structures were Monte Carlo-minimized with and without constraints. In the complex with the maximum number of contacts between the ligand and DHP-sensing residues and the lowest ligand-receptor energy, the drug fits snugly in the "water-lake" cavity between segments S6s, which were aligned with M2 segment of KcsA as proposed for Na(+) channel (Lipkind and Fozzard (2000) Biochemistry 39, 8161-8170). In the flattened-boat conformation of DHP ring, the NH group at the stern approaches the DHP-sensing tyrosines in segments IIIS6 and IVS6. Stacking interactions of IVS6 Tyr with the bowsprit aromatic ring stabilize the ligand's orientation in which the starboard COOMe group coordinates Ca(2+) ion chelated by two conserved glutamates in the selectivity filter. In the inverted teepee structure of LCC, the portside COOMe group approaches a bracelet of conserved hydrophobic residues at the helical-bundle crossing, which may function as the activation gate. The dimensions of the gate may readily change upon small rotation of the pore-forming TM segments. The end of the portside group is hydrophobic in nifedipine, (R)-Bay K 8644, and other antagonists. Favorable interactions of this group with the hydrophobic bracelet would stabilize its closed conformation. In contrast, (S)-Bay K 8644 and several other agonists have hydrophilic groups at the portside. Unfavorable interactions of the hydrophilic group with the hydrophobic bracelet would destabilize its closed conformation thereby stabilizing the open conformation. In the agonist-bound channel, Ca(2+) ions would permeate between the hydrophilic face of the ligand and conserved hydrophilic residues in segments IS6 and IIS6. Our model suggests mutational experiments that could further our understanding of the pharmacological modulation of voltage-gated ion channels.  相似文献   

16.
The M2 protein is an essential component of the Influenza virus’ infectivity cycle. It is a homo-tetrameric bundle forming a pH-gated H+ channel. The structure of M2 was solved by three different groups, using different techniques, protein sequences and pH environment. For example, solid-state NMR spectroscopy was used on a protein in lipid bilayers, while X-ray crystallography and solution NMR spectroscopy were applied on a protein in detergent micelles. The resulting structures from the above efforts are rather distinct. Herein, we examine the different structures under uniform conditions such as a lipid bilayer and specified protonation state. We employ extensive molecular dynamics simulations, in several protonation states, representing both closed and open forms of the channel. Exploring the properties of each of these structures has shown that the X-ray structure is more stable than the other structures according to various criteria, although its water conductance and water-wire formation do not correlate to the protonation state of the channel.  相似文献   

17.
Kinetics and voltage dependence of inactivation of a prokaryotic voltage-gated sodium channel (NaChBac) were investigated in an effort to understand its molecular mechanism. NaChBac inactivation kinetics show strong, bell-shaped voltage dependence with characteristic time constants ranging from approximately 50 ms at depolarized voltages to a maximum of approximately 100 s at the inactivation midpoint. Activation and inactivation parameters for four different covalently linked tandem dimer or tandem tetramer constructs were indistinguishable from those of the wild-type channel. Point mutations in the outer part of the pore revealed an important influence of the S195 residue on the process of inactivation. For two mutants (S195D and S195E), the maximal and minimal rates of inactivation observed were increased by approximately 2.5-fold, and the midpoint of the steady-state inactivation curve was shifted approximately 20 mV in the hyperpolarizing direction, compared to the wild-type channel. Our data suggest that pore vestibule structure is an important determinant of NaChBac inactivation, whereas the inactivation mechanism is independent of the number of free cytoplasmic N- and C-termini in the functional channel. In these respects, NaChBac inactivation resembles C-type or slow inactivation modes observed in other voltage-gated K and Na channels.  相似文献   

18.
Yi BA  Lin YF  Jan YN  Jan LY 《Neuron》2001,29(3):657-667
GIRK2 is a major contributor to G protein-activated inward rectifier potassium channels in the mammalian brain. How GIRK channels open upon contact with Gbetagamma remains unknown. Using a yeast genetic screen to select constitutively active mutants from a randomly mutagenized GIRK2 library, we identified five gating mutations at four residues in the transmembrane domain. Further mutagenesis indicates that GIRK channel opening involves a rotation of the transmembrane segments, bringing one of these residues (V188) to a pore-lining position in the open conformation. Combined with double-mutant studies, these findings suggest that GIRK channels gate by moving from the open conformation inferred from our yeast study of Kir2.1 to a closed conformation perhaps resembling the known KcsA structure.  相似文献   

19.
The permeation pathway in voltage-gated potassium channels has narrow constrictions at both the extracellular and intracellular ends. These constrictions might limit the flux of cations from one side of the membrane to the other. The extracellular constriction is the selectivity filter, whereas the intracellular bundle crossing is proposed to act as the activation gate that opens in response to a depolarization. This four-helix bundle crossing is composed of S6 transmembrane segments, one contributed by each subunit. Here, we explore the cytoplasmic extension of the S6 transmembrane segment of Shaker potassium channels, just downstream from the bundle crossing. We substituted cysteine for each residue from N482 to T489 and determined the amplitudes of single channel currents and maximum open probability (P(o,max)) at depolarized voltages using nonstationary noise analysis. One mutant, F484C, significantly reduces P(o,max), whereas Y483C, F484C, and most notably Y485C, reduce single channel conductance (gamma). Mutations of residue Y485 have no effect on the Rb(+)/K(+) selectivity, suggesting a local effect on gamma rather than an allosteric effect on the selectivity filter. Y485 mutations also reduce pore block by tetrabutylammonium, apparently by increasing the energy barrier for blocker movement through the open activation gate. Replacing Rb(+) ions for K(+) ions reduces the amplitude of single channel currents and makes gamma insensitive to mutations of Y485. These results suggest that Rb(+) ions increase an extracellular energy barrier, presumably at the selectivity filter, thus making it rate limiting for flux of permeant ions. These results indicate that S6(T) residues have an influence on the conformation of the open activation gate, reflected in both the stability of the open state and the energy barriers it presents to ions.  相似文献   

20.
Colicin Ia is a bactericidal protein of 626 amino acid residues that kills its target cell by forming a channel in the inner membrane; it can also form voltage-dependent channels in planar lipid bilayer membranes. The channel-forming activity resides in the carboxy-terminal domain of ~177 residues. In the crystal structure of the water-soluble conformation, this domain consists of a bundle of 10 α-helices, with eight mostly amphipathic helices surrounding a hydrophobic helical hairpin (helices H8-H9). We wish to know how this structure changes to form a channel in a lipid bilayer. Although there is evidence that the open channel has four transmembrane segments (H8, H9, and parts of H1 and H6-H7), their arrangement relative to the pore is largely unknown. Given the lack of a detailed structural model, it is imperative to better characterize the channel-lining protein segments. Here, we focus on a segment of 44 residues (573–616), which in the crystal structure comprises the H8-H9 hairpin and flanking regions. We mutated each of these residues to a unique cysteine, added the mutant colicins to the cis side of planar bilayers to form channels, and determined whether sulfhydryl-specific methanethiosulfonate reagents could alter the conduction of ions through the open channel. We found a pattern of reactivity consistent with parts of H8 and H9 lining the channel as α-helices, albeit rather short ones for spanning a lipid bilayer (12 residues). The effects of the reactions on channel conductance and selectivity tend to be greater for residues near the amino terminus of H8 and the carboxy terminus of H9, with particularly large effects for G577C, T581C, and G609C, suggesting that these residues may occupy a relatively constricted region near the cis end of the channel.  相似文献   

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