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1.
Selective permeability in voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels is dependent upon a quartet of pore-localized glutamate residues (EEEE locus). The EEEE locus is widely believed to comprise the sole high-affinity Ca(2+) binding site in the pore, which represents an overturning of earlier models that had postulated two high-affinity Ca(2+) binding sites. The current view is based on site-directed mutagenesis work in which Ca(2+) binding affinity was attenuated by single and double substitutions in the EEEE locus, and eliminated by quadruple alanine (AAAA), glutamine (QQQQ), or aspartate (DDDD) substitutions. However, interpretation of the mutagenesis work can be criticized on the grounds that EEEE locus mutations may have additionally disrupted the integrity of a second, non-EEEE locus high-affinity site, and that such a second site may have remained undetected because the mutated pore was probed only from the extracellular pore entrance. Here, we describe the results of experiments designed to test the strength of these criticisms of the single high-affinity locus model of selective permeability in Ca(2+) channels. First, substituted-cysteine accessibility experiments indicate that pore structure in the vicinity of the EEEE locus is not extensively disrupted as a consequence of the quadruple AAAA mutations, suggesting in turn that the quadruple mutations do not distort pore structure to such an extent that a second high affinity site would likely be destroyed. Second, the postulated second high-affinity site was not detected by probing from the intracellularly oriented pore entrance of AAAA and QQQQ mutants. Using inside-out patches, we found that, whereas micromolar Ca(2+) produced substantial block of outward Li(+) current in wild-type channels, internal Ca(2+) concentrations up to 1 mM did not produce detectable block of outward Li(+) current in the AAAA or QQQQ mutants. These results indicate that the EEEE locus is indeed the sole high-affinity Ca(2+) binding locus in the pore of voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels.  相似文献   

2.
The selectivity filter of voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels is in part composed of four Glu residues, termed the EEEE locus. Ion selectivity in Ca(2+) channels is based on interactions between permeant ions and the EEEE locus: in a mixture of ions, all of which can pass through the pore when present alone, those ions that bind weakly are impermeant, those that bind more strongly are permeant, and those that bind more strongly yet act as pore blockers as a consequence of their low rate of unbinding from the EEEE locus. Thus, competition among ion species is a determining feature of selectivity filter function in Ca(2+) channels. Previous work has shown that Asp and Ala substitutions in the EEEE locus reduce ion selectivity by weakening ion binding affinity. Here we describe for wild-type and EEEE locus mutants an analysis at the single channel level of competition between Cd(2+), which binds very tightly within the EEEE locus, and Ba(2+) or Li(+), which bind less tightly and hence exhibit high flux rates: Cd(2+) binds to the EEEE locus approximately 10(4)x more tightly than does Ba(2+), and approximately 10(8)x more tightly than does Li(+). For wild-type channels, Cd(2+) entry into the EEEE locus was 400x faster when Li(+) rather than Ba(2+) was the current carrier, reflecting the large difference between Ba(2+) and Li(+) in affinity for the EEEE locus. For the substitution mutants, analysis of Cd(2+) block kinetics shows that their weakened ion binding affinity can result from either a reduction in blocker on rate or an enhancement of blocker off rate. Which of these rate effects underlay weakened binding was not specified by the nature of the mutation (Asp vs. Ala), but was instead determined by the valence and affinity of the current-carrying ion (Ba(2+) vs. Li(+)). The dependence of Cd(2+) block kinetics upon properties of the current-carrying ion can be understood by considering the number of EEEE locus oxygen atoms available to interact with the different ion pairs.  相似文献   

3.
High-affinity, intrapore binding of Ca(2+) over competing ions is the essential feature in the ion selectivity mechanism of voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels. At the same time, several million Ca(2+) ions can travel each second through the pore of a single open Ca(2+) channel. How such high Ca(2+) flux is achieved in the face of tight Ca(2+) binding is a current area of inquiry, particularly from a structural point of view. The ion selectivity locus comprises four glutamate residues within the channel's pore. These glutamates make unequal contributions to Ca(2+) binding, underscoring a role for neighboring residues in pore function. By comparing two Ca(2+) channels (the L-type alpha(1C), and the non-L-type alpha(1A)) that differ in their pore properties but only differ at a single amino acid position near the selectivity locus, we have identified the amino-terminal neighbor of the glutamate residue in motif III as a determinant of pore function. This position is more important in the function of alpha(1C) channels than in alpha(1A) channels. For a systematic series of mutations at this pore position in alpha(1C), both unitary Ba(2+) conductance and Cd(2+) block of Ba(2+) current varied with residue volume. Pore mutations designed to make alpha(1C) more like alpha(1A) and vice versa revealed that relative selectivity for Ba(2+) over K(+) depended almost solely on pore sequence and not channel type. Analysis of thermodynamic mutant cycles indicates that the motif III neighbor normally interacts in a cooperative fashion with the locus, molding the functional behavior of the pore.  相似文献   

4.
Voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels (VGCC) play a key role in many physiological functions by their high selectivity for Ca(2+) over other divalent and monovalent cations in physiological situations. Divalent/monovalent selection is shared by all VGCC and is satisfactorily explained by the existence, within the pore, of a set of four conserved glutamate/aspartate residues (EEEE locus) coordinating Ca(2+) ions. This locus however does not explain either the choice of Ca(2+) among other divalent cations or the specific conductances encountered in the different VGCC. Our systematic analysis of high- and low-threshold VGCC currents in the presence of Ca(2+) and Ba(2+) reveals highly specific selectivity profiles. Sequence analysis, molecular modeling, and mutational studies identify a set of nonconserved charged residues responsible for these profiles. In HVA (high voltage activated) channels, mutations of this set modify divalent cation selectivity and channel conductance without change in divalent/monovalent selection, activation, inactivation, and kinetics properties. The Ca(V)2.1 selectivity profile is transferred to Ca(V)2.3 when exchanging their residues at this location. Numerical simulations suggest modification in an external Ca(2+) binding site in the channel pore directly involved in the choice of Ca(2+), among other divalent physiological cations, as the main permeant cation for VGCC. In LVA (low voltage activated) channels, this locus (called DCS for divalent cation selectivity) also influences divalent cation selection, but our results suggest the existence of additional determinants to fully recapitulate all the differences encountered among LVA channels. These data therefore attribute to the DCS a unique role in the specific shaping of the Ca(2+) influx between the different HVA channels.  相似文献   

5.
The structural determinant of the permeation and selectivity properties of high voltage-activated (HVA) Ca(2+) channels is a locus formed by four glutamate residues (EEEE), one in each P-region of the domains I-IV of the alpha(1) subunit. We tested whether the divergent aspartate residues of the EEDD locus of low voltage-activated (LVA or T-type) Ca(2+) channels account for the distinctive permeation and selectivity features of these channels. Using the whole-cell patch-clamp technique in the HEK293 expression system, we studied the properties of the alpha(1G) T-type, the alpha(1C) L-type Ca(2+) channel subunits, and alpha(1G) pore mutants, containing aspartate-to-glutamate conversions in domain III, domain IV, or both. Three characteristic features of HVA Ca(2+) channel permeation, i.e. (a) Ba(2+) over Ca(2+) permeability, (b) Ca(2+)/Ba(2+) anomalous mole fraction effect (AMFE), and (c) high Cd(2+) sensitivity, were conferred on the domain III mutant (EEED) of alpha(1G). In contrast, the relative Ca(2+)/Ba(2+) permeability and the lack of AMFE of the alpha(1G) wild type channel were retained in the domain IV mutant (EEDE). The double mutant (EEEE) displayed AMFE and a Cd(2+) sensitivity similar to that of alpha(1C), but currents were larger in Ca(2+)- than in Ba(2+)-containing solutions. The mutation in domain III, but not that in domain IV, consistently displayed outward fluxes of monovalent cations. H(+) blocked Ca(2+) currents in all mutants more efficiently than in alpha(1G). In addition, activation curves of all mutants were displaced to more positive voltages and had a larger slope factor than in alpha(1G) wild type. We conclude that the aspartate residues of the EEDD locus of the alpha(1G) Ca(2+) channel subunit not only control its permeation properties, but also affect its activation curve. The mutation of both divergent aspartates only partially confers HVA channel permeation properties to the alpha(1G) Ca(2+) channel subunit.  相似文献   

6.
Lanthanide gadolinium (Gd(3+)) blocks Ca(V)1.2 channels at the selectivity filter. Here we investigated whether Gd(3+) block interferes with Ca(2+)-dependent inactivation, which requires Ca(2+) entry through the same site. Using brief pulses to 200 mV that relieve Gd(3+) block but not inactivation, we monitored how the proportions of open and open-blocked channels change during inactivation. We found that blocked channels inactivate much less. This is expected for Gd(3+) block of the Ca(2+) influx that enhances inactivation. However, we also found that the extent of Gd(3+) block did not change when inactivation was reduced by abolition of Ca(2+)/calmodulin interaction, showing that Gd(3+) does not block the inactivated channel. Thus, Gd(3+) block and inactivation are mutually exclusive, suggesting action at a common site. These observations suggest that inactivation causes a change at the selectivity filter that either hides the Gd(3+) site or reduces its affinity, or that Ca(2+) occupies the binding site at the selectivity filter in inactivated channels. The latter possibility is supported by previous findings that the EEQE mutation of the selectivity EEEE locus is void of Ca(2+)-dependent inactivation (Zong Z.Q., J.Y. Zhou, and T. Tanabe. 1994. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 201:1117-11123), and that Ca(2+)-inactivated channels conduct Na(+) when Ca(2+) is removed from the extracellular medium (Babich O., D. Isaev, and R. Shirokov. 2005. J. Physiol. 565:709-717). Based on these results, we propose that inactivation increases affinity of the selectivity filter for Ca(2+) so that Ca(2+) ion blocks the pore. A minimal model, in which the inactivation "gate" is an increase in affinity of the selectivity filter for permeating ions, successfully simulates the characteristic U-shaped voltage dependence of inactivation in Ca(2+).  相似文献   

7.
Small conductance calcium-gated potassium (SK) channels share an overall topology with voltage-gated potassium (K(v)) channels, but are distinct in that they are gated solely by calcium (Ca(2+)), not voltage. For K(v) channels there is strong evidence for an activation gate at the intracellular end of the pore, which was not revealed by substituted cysteine accessibility of the homologous region in SK2 channels. In this study, the divalent ions cadmium (Cd(2+)) and barium (Ba(2+)), and 2-aminoethyl methanethiosulfonate (MTSEA) were used to probe three sites in the SK2 channel pore, each intracellular to (on the selectivity filter side of) the region that forms the intracellular activation gate of voltage-gated ion channels. We report that Cd(2+) applied to the intracellular side of the membrane can modify a cysteine introduced to a site (V391C) just intracellular to the putative activation gate whether channels are open or closed. Similarly, MTSEA applied to the intracellular side of the membrane can access a cysteine residue (A384C) that, based on homology to potassium (K) channel crystal structures (i.e., the KcsA/MthK model), resides one amino acid intracellular to the glycine gating hinge. Cd(2+) and MTSEA modify with similar rates whether the channels are open or closed. In contrast, Ba(2+) applied to the intracellular side of the membrane, which is believed to block at the intracellular end of the selectivity filter, blocks open but not closed channels when applied to the cytoplasmic face of rSK2 channels. Moreover, Ba(2+) is trapped in SK2 channels when applied to open channels that are subsequently closed. Ba(2+) pre-block slows MTSEA modification of A384C in open but not in closed (Ba(2+)-trapped) channels. The findings suggest that the SK channel activation gate resides deep in the vestibule of the channel, perhaps in the selectivity filter itself.  相似文献   

8.
Epithelial Na(+) channels (ENaCs) selectively conduct Na(+) and Li(+) but exclude K(+). A three-residue tract ((G/S)XS) present within all three subunits has been identified as a key structure forming a putative selectivity filter. We investigated the side chain orientation of residues within this tract by analyzing accessibility of the introduced sulfhydryl groups to thiophilic Cd(2+). Xenopus oocytes were used to express wild-type or mutant mouse alphabetagammaENaCs. The blocking effect of external Cd(2+) was examined by comparing amiloride-sensitive Na(+) currents measured by two-electrode voltage clamp in the absence and presence of Cd(2+) in the bath solution. The currents in mutant channels containing a single Cys substitution at the first or third position within the (G/S)XS tract (alphaG587C, alphaS589C, betaG529C, betaS531C, gammaS546C, and gammaS548C) were blocked by Cd(2+) with varying inhibitory constants (0.06-13 mm), whereas the currents in control channels were largely insensitive to Cd(2+) at concentrations up to 10 mm. The Cd(2+) blocking effects were fast, with time constants in the range of seconds, and were only partially reversible. The blocked currents were restored by 10 mm dithiothreitol. Mutant channels containing alanine or serine substitutions at these sites within the alpha subunit were only poorly and reversibly blocked by 10 mm Cd(2+). These results indicate that the introduced sulfhydryl groups face the conduction pore and suggest that serine hydroxyl groups within the selectivity filter in wild-type ENaCs face the conduction pore and may contribute to cation selectivity by participating in coordination of permeating cations.  相似文献   

9.
A conserved lysine residue in the "P loop" of domain III renders sodium channels highly selective. Conversion of this residue to glutamate, to mimic the homologous position in calcium channels, enables Ca2+ to permeate sodium channels. Because the lysine-to-glutamate mutation converts a positively charged side chain to a negative one, it has been proposed that a positive charge at this position suffices for Na+ selectivity. We tested this idea by converting the critical lysine to cysteine (K1237C) in mu 1 rat skeletal sodium channels expressed in Xenopus oocytes. Selectivity of the mutant channels was then characterized before and after chemical modification to alter side-chain charge. Wild-type channels are highly selective for Na+ over Ca2+ (PCa/PNa < 0.01). The K1237C mutation significantly increases permeability to Ca2+ (PCa/PNa = 0.6) and Sr2+. Analogous mutations in domains I (D400C), II (E755C), and IV (A1529C) did not alter the selectivity for Na+ over Ca2+, nor did any of the domain IV mutations (G1530C, W1531C, and D1532C) that are known to affect monovalent selectivity. Interestingly, the increase in permeability to Ca2+ in K1237C cannot be reversed by simply restoring the positive charge to the side chain by using the sulfhydryl modifying reagent methanethiosulfonate ethylammonium. Single-channel studies confirmed that modified K1237C channels, which exhibit a reduced unitary conductance, remain permeable to Ca2+, with a PCa/PNa of 0.6. We conclude that the chemical identity of the residue at position 1237 is crucial for channel selectivity. Simply rendering the 1237 side chain positive does not suffice to restore selectivity to the channel.  相似文献   

10.
L-type calcium channels are Ca(2+) binding proteins of great biological importance. They generate an essential intracellular signal of living cells by allowing Ca(2+) ions to move across the lipid membrane into the cell, thereby selecting an ion that is in low extracellular abundance. Their mechanism of selection involves four carboxylate groups, containing eight oxygen ions, that belong to the side chains of the "EEEE" locus of the channel protein, a setting similar to that found in many Ca(2+)-chelating molecules. This study examines the hypothesis that selectivity in this locus is determined by mutual electrostatic screening and volume exclusion between ions and carboxylate oxygens of finite diameters. In this model, the eight half-charged oxygens of the tethered carboxylate groups of the protein are confined to a subvolume of the pore (the "filter"), but interact spontaneously with their mobile counterions as ions interact in concentrated bulk solutions. The mean spherical approximation (MSA) is used to predict ion-specific excess chemical potentials in the filter and baths. The theory is calibrated using a single experimental observation, concerning the apparent dissociation constant of Ca(2+) in the presence of a physiological concentration of NaCl. When ions are assigned their independently known crystal diameters and the carboxylate oxygens are constrained, e.g., to a volume of 0.375 nm(3) in an environment with an effective dielectric coefficient of 63.5, the hypothesized selectivity filter produces the shape of the calcium binding curves observed in experiment, and it predicts Ba(2+)/Ca(2+) and Na(+)/Li(+) competition, and Cl(-) exclusion as observed. The selectivities for Na(+), Ca(2+), Ba(2+), other alkali metal ions, and Cl(-) thus can be predicted by volume exclusion and electrostatic screening alone. Spontaneous coordination of ions and carboxylates can produce a wide range of Ca(2+) selectivities, depending on the volume density of carboxylate groups and the permittivity in the locus. A specific three-dimensional structure of atoms at the binding site is not needed to explain Ca(2+) selectivity.  相似文献   

11.
Strontium (Sr(2+)), Barium (Ba(2+)) and Lanthanum (La(3+)) can substitute for Ca(2+) in driving synaptic transmission during membrane depolarization. Ion recognition at the polyglutamate motif (EEEE), comprising the channel selectivity-filter, during voltage-driven transitions, controls the kinetics of the voltage-gated calcium channel (VGCC) and its interactions with the synaptic proteins. We tested the effect of different charge carriers on evoked-release, as a means of exploring the involvement of VGCC in the fusion pore configuration. Employing amperometry recordings in single bovine chromaffin cells we show that the size of the fusion pore, designated by the 'foot'-amplitude, was increased when Ba(2+) substituted for Ca(2+) and decreased, with La(3+). The fusion pore stability, indicated by 'foot'-width, was decreased in La(3+). Also, the mean open time of the fusion pore (tau(fp)) was significantly lower in Sr(2+) and La(3+) compared to Ba(2+) and Ca(2+). These cations when occupying the selectivity filter reduced the spike frequency in the order of Ca(2+) > Sr(2+) > Ba(2+) > La(3+), which is parallel to the reduction in total catecholamine release. The correlation between ion binding at the selectivity filter and fusion pore properties supports a model in which the Ca(2+) channel regulates secretion through a site at the selectivity filter, upstream to cation entry into the cell.  相似文献   

12.
Pore size is of considerable interest in voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels because they exemplify a fundamental ability of certain ion channels: to display large pore diameter, but also great selectivity for their ion of choice. We determined the pore size of several voltage-dependent Ca(2+) channels of known molecular composition with large organic cations as probes. T-type channels supported by the Ca(V)3.1, Ca(V)3.2, and Ca(V)3.3 subunits; L-type channels encoded by the Ca(V)1.2, beta(1), and alpha(2)delta(1) subunits; and R-type channels encoded by the Ca(V)2.3 and beta(3) subunits were each studied using a Xenopus oocyte expression system. The weak permeabilities to organic cations were resolved by looking at inward tails generated upon repolarization after a large depolarizing pulse. Large inward NH(4)(+) currents and sizable methylammonium and dimethylammonium currents were observed in all of the channels tested, whereas trimethylammonium permeated only through L- and R-type channels, and tetramethylammonium currents were observed only in L-type channels. Thus, our experiments revealed an unexpected heterogeneity in pore size among different Ca(2+) channels, with L-type channels having the largest pore (effective diameter = 6.2 A), T-type channels having the tiniest pore (effective diameter = 5.1 A), and R-type channels having a pore size intermediate between these extremes. These findings ran counter to first-order expectations for these channels based simply on their degree of selectivity among inorganic cations or on the bulkiness of their acidic side chains at the locus of selectivity.  相似文献   

13.
Benz(othi)azepine (BTZ) derivatives constitute one of three major classes of L-type Ca(2+) channel ligands. Despite intensive experimental studies, no three-dimensional model of BTZ binding is available. Here we have built KvAP- and KcsA-based models of the Ca(v)1.2 pore domain in the open and closed states and used multiple Monte Carlo minimizations to dock representative ligands. In our open channel model, key functional groups of BTZs interact with BTZ-sensing residues, which were identified in previous mutational experiments. The bulky tricyclic moiety occupies interface between domains III and IV, while the ammonium group protrudes into the inner pore, where it is stabilized by nucleophilic C-ends of the pore helices. In the closed channel model, contacts with several ligand-sensing residues in the inner helices are lost, which weakens ligand-channel interactions. An important feature of the ligand-binding mode in both open and closed channels is an interaction between the BTZ carbonyl group and a Ca(2+) ion chelated by the selectivity filter glutamates in domains III and IV. In the absence of Ca(2+), the tricyclic BTZ moiety remains in the domain interface, while the ammonium group directly interacts with a glutamate residue in the selectivity filter. Our model suggests that the Ca(2+) potentiation involves a direct electrostatic interaction between aCa(2+) ion and the ligand rather than an allosteric mechanism. Energy profiles indicate that BTZs can reach the binding site from the domain interface, whereas access through the open activation gate is unlikely, because reorientation of the bulky molecule in the pore is hindered.  相似文献   

14.
We studied an E. coli OmpF mutant (LECE) containing both an EEEE-like locus, typical of Ca(2+) channels, and an accessible and reactive cysteine. After chemical modification with the cysteine-specific, negatively charged (-1e) reagents MTSES or glutathione, this LECE mutant was tested for Ca(2+) versus alkali metal selectivity. Selectivity was measured by conductance and zero-current potential. Conductance measurements showed that glutathione-modified LECE had reduced conductance at Ca(2+) mole fractions <10(-3). MTSES-modified LECE did not. Apparently, the LECE protein is (somehow) a better Ca(2+) chelator after modification with the larger glutathione. Zero-current potential measurements revealed a Ca(2+) versus monovalent cation selectivity that was highest in the presence of Li(+) and lowest in the presence of Cs(+). Our data clearly show that after the binding of Ca(2+) the LECE pore (even with the bulky glutathione present) is spacious enough to allow monovalent cations to pass. Theoretical computations based on density functional theory combined with Poisson-Nernst-Planck theory and a reduced pore model suggest a functional separation of ionic pathways in the pore, one that is specific for small and highly charged ions, and one that accepts preferentially large ions, such as Cs(+).  相似文献   

15.
The molecular basis for divalent cationic permeability in transient receptor potential melastatin subtype (TRPM) channels is not fully understood. Here we studied the roles of all eight acidic residues, glutamate or aspartate, and also the glutamine residue between pore helix and selectivity filter in the pore of TRPM2 channel. Mutants with alanine substitution in each of the acidic residues, except Glu-960 and Asp-987, formed functional channels. These channels exhibited similar Ca(2+) and Mg(2+) permeability to wild type channel, with the exception of the E1022A mutant, which displayed increased Mg(2+) permeability. More conservative E960Q, E960D, and D987N mutations also led to loss of function. The D987E mutant was functional and showed greater Ca(2+) permeability along with concentration-dependent inhibition of Na(+)-carrying currents by Ca(2+). Incorporation of negative charge in place of Gln-981 between the pore helix and selectivity filter by changing it to glutamate, which is present in the more Ca(2+)-permeable TRPM channels, substantially increased Ca(2+) permeability. Expression of concatemers linking wild type and E960D mutant subunits resulted in functional channels that exhibited reduced Ca(2+) permeability. These data taken together suggest that Glu-960, Gln-981, Asp-987, and Glu-1022 residues are engaged in determining divalent cationic permeation properties of the TRPM2 channel.  相似文献   

16.
Numerous inwardly rectifying potassium (Kir) channels possess an aromatic residue in the helix bundle crossing region, forming the narrowest pore constriction in crystal structures. However, the role of the Kir channel bundle crossing as a functional gate remains uncertain. We report a unique phenotype of Kir6.2 channels mutated to encode glutamate at this position (F168E). Despite a prediction of four glutamates in close proximity, Kir6.2(F168E) channels are predominantly closed at physiological pH, whereas alkalization causes rapid and reversible channel activation. These findings suggest that F168E glutamates are uncharged at physiological pH but become deprotonated at alkaline pH, forcing channel opening due to mutual repulsion of nearby negatively charged side chains. The potassium channel pore scaffold likely brings these glutamates close together, causing a significant pK(a) shift relative to the free side chain (as seen in the KcsA selectivity filter). Alkalization also shifts the apparent ATP sensitivity of the channel, indicating that forced motion of the bundle crossing is coupled to the ATP-binding site and may resemble conformational changes involved in wild-type Kir6.2 gating. The study demonstrates a novel mechanism for engineering extrinsic control of channel gating by pH and shows that conformational changes in the bundle crossing region are involved in ligand-dependent gating of Kir channels.  相似文献   

17.
Classical electrophysiology and contemporary crystallography suggest that the activation gate of voltage-dependent channels is on the intracellular side, but a more extracellular "pore gate" has also been proposed. We have used the voltage dependence of block by extracellular Y(3+) as a tool to locate the activation gate of the alpha1G (Ca(V)3.1) T-type calcium channel. Y(3+) block exhibited no clear voltage dependence from -40 to +40 mV (50% block at 25 nM), but block was relieved rapidly by stronger depolarization. Reblock of the open channel, reflected in accelerated tail currents, was fast and concentration dependent. Closed channels were also blocked by Y(3+) at a concentration-dependent rate, only eightfold slower than open-channel block. When extracellular Ca(2+) was replaced with Ba(2+), the rate of open block by Y(3+) was unaffected, but closed block was threefold faster than in Ca(2+), suggesting the slower closed-block rate reflects ion-ion interactions in the pore rather than an extracellularly located gate. Since an extracellular blocker can rapidly enter the closed pore, the primary activation gate must be on the intracellular side of the selectivity filter.  相似文献   

18.
Receptor-mediated Ca(2+) release from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is often followed by Ca(2+) entry through Ca(2+)-release-activated Ca(2+) (CRAC) channels in the plasma membrane . RNAi screens have identified STIM1 as the putative ER Ca(2+) sensor and CRACM1 (Orai1; ) as the putative store-operated Ca(2+) channel. Overexpression of both proteins is required to reconstitute CRAC currents (I(CRAC); ). We show here that CRACM1 forms multimeric assemblies that bind STIM1 and that acidic residues in the transmembrane (TM) and extracellular domains of CRACM1 contribute to the ionic selectivity of the CRAC-channel pore. Replacement of the conserved glutamate in position 106 of the first TM domain of CRACM1 with glutamine (E106Q) acts as a dominant-negative protein, and substitution with aspartate (E106D) enhances Na(+), Ba(2+), and Sr(2+) permeation relative to Ca(2+). Mutating E190Q in TM3 also affects channel selectivity, suggesting that glutamate residues in both TM1 and TM3 face the lumen of the pore. Furthermore, mutating a putative Ca(2+) binding site in the first extracellular loop of CRACM1 (D110/112A) enhances monovalent cation permeation, suggesting that these residues too contribute to the coordination of Ca(2+) ions to the pore. Our data provide unequivocal evidence that CRACM1 multimers form the Ca(2+)-selective CRAC-channel pore.  相似文献   

19.
Voltage-sensitive sodium channels and calcium channels are homologous proteins with distinctly different selectivity for permeation of inorganic cations. This difference in function is specified by amino acid residues located within P-region segments that link presumed transmembrane elements S5 and S6 in each of four repetitive Domains I, II, III, and IV. By analyzing the selective permeability of Na+, K+, and Ca2+ in various mutants of the mu 1 rat muscle sodium channel, the results in this paper support the concept that a conserved motif of four residues contributed by each of the Domains I-IV, termed the DEKA locus in sodium channels and the EEEE locus in calcium channels, determines the ionic selectivity of these channels. Furthermore, the results indicate that the Lys residue in Domain III of the sodium channel is the critical determinant that specifies both the impermeability of Ca2+ and the selective permeability of Na+ over K+. We propose that the alkylammonium ion of the Lys(III) residue acts as an endogenous cation within the ion binding site/selectivity filter of the sodium channel to tune the kinetics and affinity of inorganic cation binding within the pore in a manner analogous to ion-ion interactions that occur in the process of multi-ion channel conduction.  相似文献   

20.
Lipkind GM  Fozzard HA 《Biochemistry》2001,40(23):6786-6794
Using the KcsA bacterial K+ channel crystal structure [Doyle, D. A., et al. (1998) Science 280, 69-74] and the model of the outer vestibule of the Na+ channel [Lipkind, G. M., and Fozzard, H. A. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 8161-8170] as structural templates, we propose a structural model of the outer vestibule and selectivity filter of the pore of the Ca2+ channel (alpha1C or Ca(v)1.2). The Ca2+ channel P loops were modeled by alpha-helix-turn-beta-strand motifs, with the glutamate residues of the EEEE motif located in the turns. P loops were docked in the extracellular part of the inverted teepee structure formed by S5 and S6 alpha-helices with backbone coordinates from the M1 and M2 helices of the KcsA crystal structure. This construction results in a conical outer vestibule that tapers to the selectivity filter at the bottom. The modeled selectivity ring forms a wide open pore ( approximately 6 A) in the absence of Ca2+. When Ca2+ is present ( approximately 1 microM), all four glutamate side chains move to the center and form a cage around the dehydrated Ca2+ ion, blocking the pore. In the millimolar concentration range, Ca2+ also interacts with two low-affinity sites located externally and internally, which were modeled by the same carboxylate groups of the selectivity filter. Calculation of the resulting electrostatic potentials show that the single Ca2+ ion is located in an electrostatic trap. Only when three Ca2+ ions are bound simultaneously in the high- and low-affinity sites of the selectivity filter is Ca2+ able to overcome electrostatic attraction, permitting Ca2+ flux.  相似文献   

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