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1.
Crystal structures of the tetrameric KcsA K+ channel reveal seven distinct binding sites for K+ ions within the central pore formed at the fourfold rotational symmetry axis. Coordination of an individual K+ ion by eight protein oxygen atoms within the selectivity filter suggests that ion-subunit bridging by cation-oxygen interactions contributes to structural stability of the tetramer. To test this hypothesis, we examined the effect of inorganic cations on the temperature dependence of the KcsA tetramer as monitored by SDS-PAGE. Inorganic cations known to permeate or strongly block K+ channels (K+, Rb+, Cs+, Tl+, NH4+, Ba2+, and Sr2+) confer tetramer stability at higher temperatures (T0.5 range = 87 degrees C to >99 degrees C) than impermeant cations and weak blockers (Li+, Na+, Tris+, choline+; T0.5 range = 59 degrees C to 77 degrees C). Titration of K+, Ba2+, and other stabilizing cations protects against rapid loss of KcsA tetramer observed in 100 mM choline Cl at 90 degrees C. Tetramer protection titrations of K+, Rb+, Cs+, Tl+, and NH4+ at 85 degrees C or 90 degrees C exhibit apparent Hill coefficients (N) ranging from 1.7 to 3.3 and affinity constants (K0.5) ranging from 1.1 to 9.6 mM. Ba2+ and Sr2+ titrations exhibit apparent one-site behavior (N congruent with 1) with K0.5 values of 210 nM and 11 microM, respectively. At 95 degrees C in the presence of 5 mM K+, titration of Li+ or Na+ destabilizes the tetramer with K0.5 values of 57 mM and 109 mM, respectively. We conclude that specific binding interactions of inorganic cations with the selectivity filter are an important determinant of tetramer stability of KscA.  相似文献   

2.
RyR and InsP3R are Ca(2+)-release channels. When induced to open by the appropriate stimulus, these channels allow Ca2+ to leave intracellular storage organelles at an astonishing rate. Investigations of the ion-handling properties of isolated RyR channels have demonstrated that, at least in comparison to voltage-gated channels of surface membranes, these channels display limited powers of discrimination between physiologically relevant cations and this relative lack of selectivity is likely to contribute to the ability of Ca(2+)-release channels to maintain high rates of cation translocation without compromising function. A range of ion-handling properties in RyR are consistent with the proposal that this channel functions as a single-ion channel and theoretical considerations indicate that the high rates of ion translocation monitored for RyR would require the pore of such a structure to be short and possess a large capture radius. Measurements of the dimensions of regions of RyR involved in ion conduction and discrimination indicate that this is likely to be the case. In each monomer of RyR/InsP3R, residues making up the last two trans-membrane spanning domains and a luminal loop linking these two helices contribute to the formation of the channel pore. The luminal loops of both RyR and InsP3R contain amino acid sequences similar to those known to form the selectivity filter of K+ channels. In addition the luminal loops of both Ca(2+)-release channels contain sequences that are likely to form helices that may be analogous to the pore helix visualised in KcsA. The correlation in structural elements of the luminal loops of RyR/InsP3R and KcsA has prompted us to speculate on the tertiary arrangement for this region of the Ca(2+)-release channels using the established structure of KcsA as a framework.  相似文献   

3.
Ryanodine receptor 1 (RyR1) is a large homotetrameric calcium channel that plays a pivotal role in skeletal muscle contraction. Sequence comparison and mutagenesis studies indicate that the pore architecture of RyR1, including the last two transmembrane helices and the luminal loop linking them, is similar to that of the bacterial KcsA K(+) channel. Here, we describe the overexpression and purification of the C-terminal polyhistidine-tagged RyR1 pore-forming region. The nonionic detergent lauryldimethylamine oxide (LDAO) was selected for solubilization of the protein based on its ability to extract the protein from the membrane and to maintain it in a monodisperse state. The protein was then purified using nickel-affinity chromatography and gel filtration. Gel filtration analysis confirmed that the RyR1 fragment containing the pore-forming region (amino acids 4829-5037) is sufficient to form a tetramer.  相似文献   

4.
Sequence comparison suggests that the ryanodine receptors (RyRs) have pore architecture similar to that of the bacterial K+ channel KcsA. The lumenal loop linking the two most C-terminal transmembrane spanning segments in the RyRs has a predicted pore helix and an amino acid motif (GGGIG) similar to the selectivity filter (TVGYG) of KcsA identified by x-ray analysis. The RyRs have many negatively charged amino acid residues in the two regions linking the GGGIG motif and predicted pore helix with the two most C-terminal transmembrane spanning segments. We tested the role of these residues by generating single-site mutants, focusing on amino acid residues conserved among the mammalian RyRs. Replacement of two acidic residues immediately after the GGGIG motif in skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor (RyR1-D4899 and -E4900) with asparagine and glutamine profoundly affected ion permeation and selectivity. By comparison, mutagenesis of aspartate and glutamate residues in the putative linker regions showed a K+ conductance and selectivity for Ca2+ compared to K+ (P(Ca)/P(K)) close to wild-type. The results show that the negatively charged carboxyl oxygens of D4899 and E4900 side chains are major determinants of RyR ion conductance and selectivity.  相似文献   

5.
A homology model of the pore domain of the Shaker K+ channel has been constructed using a bacterial K+ channel, KcsA, as a template structure. The model is in agreement with mutagenesis and sequence variability data. A number of structural features are conserved between the two channels, including a ring of tryptophan sidechains on the outer surface of the pore domain at the extracellular end of the helix bundle, and rings of acidic sidechains close to the extracellular mouth of the channel. One of these rings, that formed by four Asp447 sidechains at the mouth of the Shaker pore, is shown by pK(A) calculations to be incompletely ionized at neutral pH. The potential energy profile for a K+ ion moved along the central axis of the Shaker pore domain model selectivity filter reveals a shallow well, the depth of which is modulated by the ionization state of the Asp447 ring. This is more consistent with the high cation flux exhibited by the channel in its conductance value of 19 pS.  相似文献   

6.
The selectivity filter of most K+ channels contains a highly conserved Thr residue that uniquely forms the S4 binding site for K+ by dual coordination with the backbone carbonyl oxygen and side chain hydroxyl of the same residue. This study examines the effect of mutations of Thr75 in the S4 site of theKcsA K+ channel on the cation dependence of the thermal stability of the tetramer, a phenomenon that reflects the structural role of cations in the filter. Conservative mutations of Thr75 destabilize the tetramer and alter its temperature dependence. Replacement of Thr with Ala or Cys lowers the apparent affinity ofK+, Rb+, and Cs+ for tetramer stabilization by factors ranging from 4- to 14-fold. These same mutations lower the apparent affinity of Ba2+ by approximately 10(3)- or approximately 10(4)-fold for Ala and Cys substitution, respectively,consistent with the known preference of the S4 site for Ba2+. In contrast, substitution of Ala or Cys at T75 anomalously enhances the ability of Na+ to stabilize the tetramer, suggesting that the native Thr residue at S4 is important for ultrahigh K+/Na+ selectivity of K+ channel pores. Elevated temperature orCu2+ cation catalyzes formation of covalent dimers of the T75C mutant of KcsA via formation of disulfide bonds between Cys residues of adjacent subunits. Thiophilic cations such as Hg2+ and Ag+ specifically protect the T75C tetramer against heat-induced dimer formation, demonstrating the contribution of cation interactions to tetramer stability in a channel with a non-native S4 site engineered to bind foreign cations.  相似文献   

7.
The propagation of electrical signals in excitable cells is orchestrated by a molecular family of voltage-dependent ion channel proteins. These K+, Na+, and Ca++ channels are all composed of four identical or similar units, each containing six transmembrane segments (S1-S6) in a roughly four-fold symmetric structure. The S5-S6 sequences fold into a central pore unit, which is surrounded by a voltage-gating module composed of S1-S4. The recent structure of KcsA, a two-transmembrane bacterial K+ channel, illuminates the physical character of the pore unit, but little is known about the arrangement of the surrounding S1-S4 sequences. To locate regions of this gating module in space, we synthesized a series of compounds of varying length that function as molecular 'tape measures': quaternary ammonium (QA) pore blockers that can be tethered to specific test residues. We show that in a Shaker K+ channel, the extracellular ends of S1 and S3 are approximately 30 ? from the tetraethylammonium (TEA) blocking site at the external opening of the pore. A portion of the S3-S4 loop is, at 17-18 ?, considerably closer.  相似文献   

8.
Using Ba2+ as a probe, we performed a detailed characterization of an external K+ binding site located in the pore of a large conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (BKCa) channel from skeletal muscle incorporated into planar lipid bilayers. Internal Ba2+ blocks BKCa channels and decreasing external K+ using a K+ chelator, (+)-18-Crown-6-tetracarboxylic acid, dramatically reduces the duration of the Ba2+-blocked events. Average Ba2+ dwell time changes from 10 s at 10 mM external K+ to 100 ms in the limit of very low [K+]. Using a model where external K+ binds to a site hindering the exit of Ba2+ toward the external side (Neyton, J., and C. Miller. 1988. J. Gen. Physiol. 92:549-568), we calculated a dissociation constant of 2.7 mircoM for K) at this lock-in site. We also found that BK(Ca) channels enter into a long-lasting nonconductive state when the external [K+] is reduced below 4 microM using the crown ether. Channel activity can be recovered by adding K+, Rb+, Cs+, or NH4+ to the external solution. These results suggest that the BK(Ca) channel stability in solutions of very low [K+] is due to K+ binding to a site having a very high affinity. Occupancy of this site by K+ avoids the channel conductance collapse and the exit of Ba2+ toward the external side. External tetraethylammonium also reduced the Ba2+ off rate and impeded the channel from entering into the long-lasting nonconductive state. This effect requires the presence of external K+. It is explained in terms of a model in which the conduction pore contains Ba2+, K+, and tetraethylammonium simultaneously, with the K+ binding site located internal to the tetraethylammonium site. Altogether, these results and the known potassium channel structure (Doyle, D.A., J.M. Cabral, R.A. Pfuetzner, A. Kuo, J.M. Gulbis, S.L. Cohen, B.T. Chait, and R. MacKinnon. 1998. Science. 280:69-77) imply that the lock-in site and the Ba2+ sites are the external and internal ion sites of the selectivity filter, respectively.  相似文献   

9.
Here we present functional evidence for involvement of poly-(R)-3-hydroxybutyrate (PHB) and inorganic polyphosphate (polyP) in ion conduction and selection at the intracellular side of the Streptomyces lividans potassium channel, KcsA. At < or = 25 degrees C, KcsA forms channels in planar bilayers that display signal characteristics of PHB/polyP channels at the intracellular side; i.e., a preference for divalent Mg(2+) cations at pH 7.2, and a preference for monovalent K+ cations at pH 6.8. Between 25 and 26 degrees C, KcsA undergoes a transition to a new conformation in which the channel exhibits high selectivity for K+, regardless of solution pH. This suggests that basic residues of the C-terminal polypeptides have moved closer to the polyP end unit, reducing its negative charge. The data support a supramolecular structure for KcsA in which influx of ions is prevented by the selectivity pore, whereas efflux of K+ is governed by a conductive core of PHB/polyP in partnership with the C-terminal polypeptide strands.  相似文献   

10.
Reusch RN 《Biochemistry》1999,38(47):15666-15672
The Streptomyces lividans KcsA potassium channel, a homotetramer of 17.6 kDa subunits, was found to contain two nonproteinaceous polymers, namely, poly-(R)-3-hydroxybutyrate (PHB) and inorganic polyphosphate (polyP). PHB and polyP are ubiquitous cellular constituents with a demonstrated capacity for cation selection and transport. PHB was detected in both tetramer and monomer species of KcsA by reaction to anti-PHB IgG on Western blots, and estimated as 28 monomer units of PHB per KcsA tetramer by a chemical assay in which PHB is converted to its unique degradation product, crotonic acid. PolyP was detected in KcsA tetramers, but not in monomers, by metachromatic reaction to o-toluidine blue stain on SDS-PAGE gels. A band of free polyP was also visible, suggesting that polyP is released when tetramers dissociate. The exopolyphosphatase of Saccharomyces cerevisiae degraded the free polyP, but tetramer-associated polyP was not affected, indicating it was inaccessible to the enzyme. PolyP in KcsA was estimated as 15 monomer units per tetramer by an enzymatic assay in which polyphosphate kinase is used to transfer phosphates from polyP to [(14)C]ADP, yielding [(14)C]ATP. The experimentally determined isoelectric point of KcsA tetramer was 6.5-7.5, substantially more acidic than the theoretical pI of 10.3, and consistent with the inclusion of a polyanion. The results suggest that PHB is covalently bound to KcsA subunits while polyP is held within tetramers by ionic forces. It is posited that KcsA protein creates an environment in which PHB/polyP is selective for K(+). The basic amino acids attenuate the negative charge density of polyP, thereby transforming the cation binding preference from multivalent to monovalent, and discrimination between K(+) and Na(+) is accomplished by adjusting the ligand geometry in cation binding cavities formed by PHB and polyP.  相似文献   

11.
Fundamental concepts governing ion selectivity in narrow pores are reviewed and the microscopic factors responsible for the lack of selectivity of the NaK channel, which is structurally similar to the K+-selective KcsA channel, are elucidated on the basis of all-atom molecular dynamics free energy simulations. The results on NaK are contrasted and compared with previous studies of the KcsA channel. Analysis indicates that differences in hydration of the cation in the pore of NaK is at the origin of the lack of selectivity of NaK.  相似文献   

12.
Moderate concentrations of the alcohol 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol (TFE) cause the coupled unfolding and dissociation into subunits of the homotetrameric potassium channel KcsA, in a process that is partially irreversible when the protein is solubilized in plain dodecyl beta-d-maltoside (DDM) micelles [Barrera et al. (2005) Biochemistry 44, 14344-52]. Here we report that the transition from the folded tetramer to the unfolded monomer becomes completely reversible when KcsA is solubilized in mixed micelles composed of the detergent DDM and the lipids DOPE (1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine) and DOPG (1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-[phospho-rac-(1-glycerol)]). This result suggests that lipids may act as effectors in the tetramerization of KcsA. The observed reversibility allowed the determination of the standard free energy of the folding reaction of KcsA: DeltaG = 30.5 +/- 3.1 kcal x mol-1. We also observed that, prior to the unfolding of the tetramer, the presence of lower TFE concentrations causes the disassembly of supramolecular clusters of KcsA into the individual tetrameric molecules. Within the limits of experimental resolution, this is also a reversible process, but unlike the tetramer to monomer transition from above, the level of clustering is not influenced by the presence of solubilized lipids. These observations suggest a distinct role of the lipids in the different in vitro assembly steps (folding/tetramerization and clustering) of KcsA.  相似文献   

13.
Voltage-sensitive cation-selective ion channels of the voltage-gated ion channel (VGC) superfamily were examined by a combination of sequence alignment and phylogenetic tree construction procedures. Segments of the alpha-subunits of K+-selective channels homologous to the structurally elucidated KcsA channel of Streptomyces lividans were multiply aligned, and this alignment provided the database for computer-assisted structural analyses and phylogenetic tree construction. Similar analyses were conducted with the four homologous repeats of the alpha-subunits from representative Ca2+- and Na+-selective channels, as well as with the ensemble of K+, Ca2+ and Na+ channels. In both the single subunit of the K+ channels and the individual repeats of the Ca2+ and Na+ channels, the analyses suggest the occurrence of at least two tandemly arranged modules corresponding to the predicted voltage-sensor domain and the pore domain. The phylogenetic analyses reveal strict clustering of segments according to cation-selectivity and repeat unit. We surmise that the pore module of the prokaryotic K+ channel was the primordial polypeptide upon which other modules were superimposed during evolution in order to generate phenotypic diversity. These observations may prove applicable to all members of the VGC family yet to be discovered throughout the prokaryotic and eukaryotic kingdoms.  相似文献   

14.
Li-Smerin Y  Hackos DH  Swartz KJ 《Neuron》2000,25(2):411-423
Voltage-gated K+ channels contain a central pore domain and four surrounding voltage-sensing domains. How and where changes in the structure of the voltage-sensing domains couple to the pore domain so as to gate ion conduction is not understood. The crystal structure of KcsA, a bacterial K+ channel homologous to the pore domain of voltage-gated K+ channels, provides a starting point for addressing this question. Guided by this structure, we used tryptophan-scanning mutagenesis on the transmembrane shell of the pore domain in the Shaker voltage-gated K+ channel to localize potential protein-protein and protein-lipid interfaces. Some mutants cause only minor changes in gating and when mapped onto the KcsA structure cluster away from the interface between pore domain subunits. In contrast, mutants producing large changes in gating tend to cluster near this interface. These results imply that voltage-sensing domains interact with localized regions near the interface between adjacent pore domain subunits.  相似文献   

15.
The stability of the KcsA channel accommodating more than one ion in the pore has been studied with molecular dynamics. We have used the very last X-ray structure of the KcsA channel at 2.0-A resolution determined by Zhou et al. [Nature 414 (2001) 43]. In this channel, six of the seven experimentally evidenced sites have been considered. We show that the protein remains very stable in the presence of four K+ ions (three in the selectivity filter and one in the cavity). The locations and the respective distances of the different K+ ions and water molecules (W), calculated within our KWKWKK sequence, also fits well with the experimental observations. The analysis of the K+ ions and water molecules displacements shows concerted file motions on the simulated time scale (approximately 1 ns), which could act as precursor to the diffusion of K+ ions inside the channel. A simple one-dimensional dynamical model is used to interpret the concerted motions of the ions and water molecules in the pore leading ultimately to ion transfer.  相似文献   

16.
The bacterial potassium (K+) channel KcsA provides an attractive model system to study ion permeation behavior in a selective K+-channel. We changed residue at the N-terminal end of the selectivity filter of KcsA (T74V) to its counterpart in inwardly rectifying K+-channels (Kir). The tetramer was found to be stable as unmodified KcsA. Under symmetrical and asymmetrical conditions, Na+ increased the inward current in the virtual absence of K+ however outward currents were nearly abolished which could be recovered upon internal K+ addition. Na+ also drastically increased the channel open time either in the presence or virtual absence of K+. Furthermore, the T74V mutation decreased the internal Ba2+ affinity of the channel possibly by binding to a K+ site in the pore. In additional experiments, another point mutation V76I in T74V mutant was carried out thus the selectivity filter resembled more the selectivity filter of Kir channels. The mutant tetramer was converted into monomers as determined by conventional gel electrophoresis. However, native like gel electrophoresis, Trp fluorescence and acrylamide quenching experiments indicated that this mutant still formed a tetramer and apparently adopted similar folding properties as unmodified KcsA. Single-channel experiments further demonstrated that the channel was selective for K+ over Na+ as Na+ blocked channel currents. These data suggest that single point mutation T74V alters the selectivity filter and allows simultaneous occupancy and conduction of K+ and Na+ probably via ion–ion interaction in the pore. In contrast, both mutations (T74V and V76I) in the same molecule seem to reorganize the pore conformation which controls the overall stability of a selective K+-channel.  相似文献   

17.
Local anesthetics and related drugs block ionic currents of Na+, K+ and Ca2+ conducted across the cell membrane by voltage-dependent ion channels. Many of these drugs bind in the permeation pathway, occlude the pore and stop ion movement. However channel-blocking drugs have also been associated with decreased membrane stability of certain tetrameric K+ channels, similar to the destabilization of channel function observed at low extracellular K+ concentration. Such drug-dependent stability may result from electrostatic repulsion of K+ from the selectivity filter by a cationic drug molecule bound in the central cavity of the channel. In this study we used the pore domain of the KcsA K+ channel protein to test this hypothesis experimentally with a biochemical assay of tetramer stability and theoretically by computational simulation of local anesthetic docking to the central cavity. We find that two common local anesthetics, lidocaine and tetracaine, promote thermal dissociation of the KcsA tetramer in a K+-dependent fashion. Docking simulations of these drugs with open, open-inactivated and closed crystal structures of KcsA yield many energetically favorable drug-channel complexes characterized by nonbonded attraction to pore-lining residues and electrostatic repulsion of K+. The results suggest that binding of cationic drugs to the inner cavity can reduce tetramer stability of K+ channels.  相似文献   

18.
Molecular models of the M2 segments of the GluR1 channel have been elaborated using a molecular mechanics approach. The models are based on the homology between pore-lining segments of AMPA receptor channels and the KcsA K+ channel and on cyclic H bonds at the Q/R site of the AMPA receptor channel. The N-terminal region of an M2 segment of the channel is assumed, like that of the K+ channel, to adopt a helical conformation. Due to a deletion, the C-terminal end of the M2 segment of the AMPA receptor is more stretched than that of the K+ channel. As a result, only a single oxygen ring may be exposed to the AMPA receptor channel pore. Data on the block of AMPA receptor channels by dicationic adamantane derivatives have been used to select the most relevant model. The model with the oxygen of a Gly residue (position +2 from the Q/R site) exposed to the pore best fits the experimental data. This model also fits experimental data for another class of AMPA receptor antagonists, the polyamine amides. According to the model, the side-chains of the C-terminal residues are involved in intra-receptor interactions that stabilize the structure of the channel rather than in interactions with ions in the pore.  相似文献   

19.
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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