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1.
A recently proposed model for voltage-dependent activation in K+ channels, largely influenced by the KvAP X-ray structure, suggests that S4 is located at the periphery of the channel and moves through the lipid bilayer upon depolarization. To investigate the physical distance between S4 and the pore domain in functional channels in a native membrane environment, we engineered pairs of cysteines, one each in S4 and the pore of Shaker channels, and identified two instances of spontaneous intersubunit disulfide bond formation, between R362C/A419C and R362C/F416C. After reduction, these cysteine pairs bound Cd2+ with high affinity, verifying that the residues are in atomic proximity. Molecular modeling based on the MthK structure revealed a single position for S4 that was consistent with our results and many other experimental constraints. The model predicts that S4 is located in the groove between pore domains from different subunits, rather than at the periphery of the protein.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract

The hERG potassium channel is a member of the voltage gated potassium (Kv) channel family, comprising a pore domain and four voltage sensing domains (VSDs). Like other Kv channels, the VSD senses changes in membrane voltage and transmits the signal to gates located in the pore domain; the gates open at positive potentials (activation) and close at negative potentials, thereby controlling the ion flux. hERG, however, differs from other Kv channels in that it is activated slowly but inactivated rapidly – a property that is crucial for the role it plays in the repolarization of the cardiac action potential. Voltage-gating requires movement of gating charges across the membrane electric field, which is accomplished by the transmembrane movement of the fourth transmembrane segment, S4, of the VSD containing the positively charged arginine or lysine residues. Here we ask if the functional differences between hERG and other Kv channels could arise from differences in the transmembrane movement of S4. To address this, we have introduced single cysteine residues into the S4 region of the VSD, expressed the mutant channels in Xenopus oocytes and examined the effect of membrane impermeable para-chloromercuribenzene sulphonate on function by the two-electrode voltage clamp technique. Our results show that depolarization results in the accessibility of seven consecutive S4 residues, including the first two charged residues, K525 and R528, to extracellularly applied reagent. These data indicate that the extent of S4 movement in hERG is similar to other Kv channels, including the archabacterial KvAP and the Shaker channel of Drosophila.  相似文献   

3.
A four-pulse electron paramagnetic resonance experiment was used to measure long-range inter-subunit distances in reconstituted KvAP, a voltage-dependent potassium (Kv) channel. The measurements have allowed us to reach the following five conclusions about the native structure of the voltage sensor of KvAP. First, the S1 helix of the voltage sensor engages in a helix packing interaction with the pore domain. Second, the crystallographically observed antiparallel helix-turn-helix motif of the voltage-sensing paddle is retained in the membrane-embedded voltage sensor. Third, the paddle is oriented in such a way as to expose one face to the pore domain and the opposite face to the membrane. Fourth, the paddle and the pore domain appear to be separated by a gap that is sufficiently wide for lipids to penetrate between the two domains. Fifth, the critical voltage-sensing arginine residues on the paddle appear to be lipid exposed. These results demonstrate the importance of the membrane for the native structure of Kv channels, suggest that lipids are an integral part of their native structure, and place the voltage-sensing machinery into a complex lipid environment near the pore domain.  相似文献   

4.
Voltage-gated ion channels are responsible for the generation of action potentials in our nervous system. Conformational rearrangements in their voltage sensor domains in response to changes of the membrane potential control pore opening and thus ion conduction. Crystal structures of the open channel in combination with a wealth of biophysical data and molecular dynamics simulations led to a consensus on the voltage sensor movement. However, the coupling between voltage sensor movement and pore opening, the electromechanical coupling, occurs at the cytosolic face of the channel, from where no structural information is available yet. In particular, the question how far the cytosolic pore gate has to close to prevent ion conduction remains controversial. In cells, spectroscopic methods are hindered because labeling of internal sites remains difficult, whereas liposomes or detergent solutions containing purified ion channels lack voltage control. Here, to overcome these problems, we controlled the state of the channel by varying the lipid environment. This way, we directly measured the position of the S4-S5 linker in both the open and the closed state of a prokaryotic Kv channel (KvAP) in a lipid environment using Lanthanide-based resonance energy transfer. We were able to reconstruct the movement of the covalent link between the voltage sensor and the pore domain and used this information as restraints for molecular dynamics simulations of the closed state structure. We found that a small decrease of the pore radius of about 3–4 Å is sufficient to prevent ion permeation through the pore.  相似文献   

5.
The recent crystal structures of the voltage-gated potassium channel KvAP and its isolated voltage-sensing 'paddle' (composed of segments S1-S4) challenge existing models of voltage gating and raise a number of questions about the structure of the physiologically relevant state. We investigate a possible gating mechanism based on the crystal structures in a 10 ns steered molecular dynamics simulation of KvAP in a membrane-mimetic octane layer. The structure of the full KvAP protein has been modified by restraining the S2-S4 domain to the conformation of the isolated high-resolution paddle structure. After an initial relaxation, the paddle tips are pulled through the membrane from the intracellular to the extracellular side, corresponding to a putative change from closed to open. We describe the effect of this large-scale motion on the central pore domain, which remains largely unchanged, on the protein hydrogen-bonding network and on solvent. We analyze the motion of the S3b-S4 portion of the protein and propose a possible coupling mechanism between the paddle motion and the opening of the channel. Interactions between the arginine residues in S4, solvent and chloride ions are likely to play a role in the gating charge.  相似文献   

6.
Lee HC  Wang JM  Swartz KJ 《Neuron》2003,40(3):527-536
In voltage-activated potassium (Kv) channels, basic residues in S4 enable the voltage-sensing domain to move in response to membrane depolarization and thereby trigger the activation gate to open. In the X-ray structure of the KvAP channel, the S4 helix is located near the intracellular boundary of the membrane where it forms a "voltage-sensor paddle" motif with the S3b helix. It has been proposed that the paddle is lipid-exposed and that it translocates through the membrane as it activates. We studied the interaction of externally applied Hanatoxin with the voltage-sensor paddle in Kv channels and show that the toxin binds tightly even at negative voltages where the paddle is resting and the channel is closed. Moreover, measurements of gating charge movement suggest that Hanatoxin interacts with and stabilizes the resting paddle. These findings point to an extracellular location for the resting conformation of the voltage-sensor paddle and constrain its transmembrane movements during activation.  相似文献   

7.
Ruta V  Chen J  MacKinnon R 《Cell》2005,123(3):463-475
Voltage-dependent ion channels open and conduct ions in response to changes in cell-membrane voltage. The voltage sensitivity of these channels arises from the motion of charged arginine residues located on the S4 helices of the channel's voltage sensors. In KvAP, a prokaryotic voltage-dependent K+ channel, the S4 helix forms part of a helical hairpin structure, the voltage-sensor paddle. We have measured the membrane depth of residues throughout the KvAP channel using avidin accessibility to different-length tethered biotin reagents. From these measurements, we have calibrated the tether lengths and derived the thickness of the membrane that forms a barrier to avidin penetration, allowing us to determine the magnitude of displacement of the voltage-sensor paddles during channel gating. Here we show that the voltage-sensor paddles are highly mobile compared to other regions of the channel and transfer the gating-charge arginines 15-20 A through the membrane to open the pore.  相似文献   

8.
Voltage-gated potassium channels are six-transmembrane (S1-S6) proteins that form a central pore domain (4 x S5-S6) surrounded by four voltage sensor domains (S1-S4), which detect changes in membrane voltage and control pore opening. Upon depolarization, the S4 segments move outward carrying charged residues across the membrane field, thereby leading to the opening of the pore. The mechanism of S4 motion is controversial. We have investigated how S4 moves relative to the pore domain in the prototypical Shaker potassium channel. We introduced pairs of cysteines, one in S4 and the other in S5, and examined proximity changes between each pair of cysteines during activation, using Cd2+ and copper-phenanthroline, which crosslink the cysteines with metal and disulphide bridges, respectively. Modelling of the results suggests a novel mechanism: in the resting state, the top of the S3b-S4 voltage sensor paddle lies close to the top of S5 of the adjacent subunit, but moves towards the top of S5 of its own subunit during depolarization--this motion is accompanied by a reorientation of S4 charges to the extracellular phase.  相似文献   

9.
Voltage-dependent potassium (Kv), sodium (Nav), and calcium channels open and close in response to changes in transmembrane (TM) potential, thus regulating cell excitability by controlling ion flow across the membrane. An outstanding question concerning voltage gating is how voltage-induced conformational changes of the channel voltage-sensing domains (VSDs) are coupled through the S4-S5 interfacial linking helices to the opening and closing of the pore domain (PD). To investigate the coupling between the VSDs and the PD, we generated a closed Kv channel configuration from Aeropyrum pernix (KvAP) using atomistic simulations with experiment-based restraints on the VSDs. Full closure of the channel required, in addition to the experimentally determined TM displacement, that the VSDs be displaced both inwardly and laterally around the PD. This twisting motion generates a tight hydrophobic interface between the S4-S5 linkers and the C-terminal ends of the pore domain S6 helices in agreement with available experimental evidence.  相似文献   

10.
Having inspected the crystal structure of the complete KvAP channel protein, we suspect that the voltage-sensing domain is too distorted to provide reliable information about its native tertiary structure or its interactions with the central pore-forming domain. On the other hand, a second crystal structure of the isolated voltage-sensing domain may well correspond to a native open conformation. We also observe that the paddle model of gating developed from these two structures is inconsistent with many experimental results, and suspect it to be energetically unrealistic. Here we show that the isolated voltage-sensing domain crystal structure can be docked onto the pore domain portion of the full-length KvAP crystal structure in an energetically favorable way to create a model of the open conformation. Using this as a starting point, we have developed rather conventional models of resting and transition conformations based on the helical screw mechanism for the transition from the open to the resting conformation. Our models are consistent with both theoretical considerations and experimental results.  相似文献   

11.
Structural dynamics of an isolated voltage-sensor domain in a lipid bilayer   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
A strong interplay between the voltage-sensor domain (VSD) and the pore domain (PD) underlies voltage-gated channel functions. In a few voltage-sensitive proteins, the VSD has been shown to function without a canonical PD, although its structure and oligomeric state remain unknown. Here, using EPR spectroscopy, we show that the isolated VSD of KvAP can remain monomeric in a reconstituted bilayer and retain a transmembrane conformation. We find that water-filled crevices extending deep into the membrane around S3, a scaffold conducive to transport of protons/cations, are intrinsic to the VSD. Differences in solvent accessibility in comparison to the full-length KvAP allowed us to define an interacting footprint of the PD on the VSD. This interaction is centered around S1 and S2 and suggests a rotation of 70 degrees -100 degrees relative to Kv1.2-Kv2.1 chimera. Sequence-conservation patterns in Kv channels, Hv channels, and voltage-sensitive phosphatases reveal several near-universal features suggesting a common molecular architecture for all VSDs.  相似文献   

12.
In ether-a-go-go K+ channels, voltage-dependent activation is modulated by ion binding to a site located in an extracellular-facing crevice between transmembrane segments S2 and S3 in the voltage sensor. We find that acidic residues D278 in S2 and D327 in S3 are able to coordinate a variety of divalent cations, including Mg2+, Mn2+, and Ni2+, which have qualitatively similar functional effects, but different half-maximal effective concentrations. Our data indicate that ions binding to individual voltage sensors in the tetrameric channel act without cooperativity to modulate activation gating. We have taken advantage of the unique phenotype of Ni2+ in the D274A channel, which contains a mutation of a nonbinding site residue, to demonstrate that ions can access the binding site from the extracellular solution when the voltage sensor is in the resting conformation. Our results are difficult to reconcile with the x-ray structure of the KvAP K+ channel, in which the binding site residues are widely separated, and with the hydrophobic paddle model for voltage-dependent activation, in which the voltage sensor domain, including the S3-S4 loop, is near the cytoplasmic side of the membrane in the closed channel.  相似文献   

13.
Voltage-activated potassium (K(v)) channels contain a central pore domain that is partially surrounded by four voltage-sensing domains. Recent X-ray structures suggest that the two domains lack extensive protein-protein contacts within presumed transmembrane regions, but whether this is the case for functional channels embedded in lipid membranes remains to be tested. We investigated domain interactions in the Shaker K(v) channel by systematically mutating the pore domain and assessing tolerance by examining channel maturation, S4 gating charge movement, and channel opening. When mapped onto the X-ray structure of the K(v)1.2 channel the large number of permissive mutations support the notion of relatively independent domains, consistent with crystallographic studies. Inspection of the maps also identifies portions of the interface where residues are sensitive to mutation, an external cluster where mutations hinder voltage sensor activation, and an internal cluster where domain interactions between S4 and S5 helices from adjacent subunits appear crucial for the concerted opening transition.  相似文献   

14.
Abstract

Recent structures of the potassium channel provide an essential beginning point for explaining how the pore is gated between open and closed conformations by changes in membrane voltage. Yet, the molecular details of this process and the connections to transmembrane gradients are not understood. To begin addressing how changes within a membrane environment lead to the channel’s ability to sense shifts in membrane voltage and to gate, we performed double-bilayer simulations of the Kv1.2 channel. These double-bilayer simulations enable us to simulate realistic voltage drops from resting potential conditions to depolarized conditions by changes in the bath conditions on each side of the bilayer. Our results show how the voltage sensor domain movement responds to differences in transmembrane potential. The initial voltage sensor domain movement, S4 in particular, is modulated by the gating charge response to changes in voltage and is initially stabilized by the lipid headgroups. We show this response is directly coupled to the initial stages of pore domain motion. Results presented here provide a molecular model for how the pre-gating process occurs in sequential steps: Gating charge response, movement and stabilization of the S4 voltage sensor domain, and movement near the base of the S5 region to close the pore domain.  相似文献   

15.
The functional channel unit of K + channels with two pore regions in tandem is thought to be a homodimer and it has been suggested that this dimeric structure occurs by interaction of an extracellular domain, the self-interacting domain. Interaction and functional assembly have been studied in some detail for KCNK1. It is proposed that a disulphide bond between highly conserved C69 residues of the self-interacting domain is formed which is essential for channel activity. We mutated C51, the equivalent residue in the pH-dependent KCNK5, to study its effect on channel function. Western analysis of proteins from cells expressing epitope-tagged KCNK5 and KCNK5-C51S was consistent with reduction-sensitive self-association of monomers dependent upon the presence of C51. Patch-clamp analysis of heterologously expressed KCNK5-C51S, however, revealed it was functional and indistinguishable in rectification properties and pH dependence from the non-mutated channel. The same result was found with KCNK5-C115S. It is concluded that the proposed disulphide bond between cysteine 51 residues of KCNK5 subunits does occur and preserves a dimeric structure in the detergent solubilized complex. Functional assays, on the other hand, suggest that such a disulphide bridge is not essential for correct functional expression.  相似文献   

16.
The functional channel unit of K(+) channels with two pore regions in tandem is thought to be a homodimer and it has been suggested that this dimeric structure occurs by interaction of an extracellular domain, the self-interacting domain. Interaction and functional assembly have been studied in some detail for KCNK1. It is proposed that a disulphide bond between highly conserved C69 residues of the self-interacting domain is formed which is essential for channel activity. We mutated C51, the equivalent residue in the pH-dependent KCNK5, to study its effect on channel function. Western analysis of proteins from cells expressing epitope-tagged KCNK5 and KCNK5-C51S was consistent with reduction-sensitive self-association of monomers dependent upon the presence of C51. Patch-clamp analysis of heterologously expressed KCNK5-C51S, however, revealed it was functional and indistinguishable in rectification properties and pH dependence from the non-mutated channel. The same result was found with KCNK5-C115S. It is concluded that the proposed disulphide bond between cysteine 51 residues of KCNK5 subunits does occur and preserves a dimeric structure in the detergent solubilized complex. Functional assays, on the other hand, suggest that such a disulphide bridge is not essential for correct functional expression.  相似文献   

17.
Cysteine-scanning mutagenesis (SCAM) and computer-based modeling were used to investigate key structural features of the S6 transmembrane segment of the calcium-activated K(+) channel of intermediate conductance IKCa. Our SCAM results show that the interaction of [2-(trimethylammonium)ethyl] methanethiosulfonate bromide (MTSET) with cysteines engineered at positions 275, 278, and 282 leads to current inhibition. This effect was state dependent as MTSET appeared less effective at inhibiting IKCa in the closed (zero Ca(2+) conditions) than open state configuration. Our results also indicate that the last four residues in S6, from A283 to A286, are entirely exposed to water in open IKCa channels, whereas MTSET can still reach the 283C and 286C residues with IKCa maintained in a closed state configuration. Notably, the internal application of MTSET or sodium (2-sulfonatoethyl) methanethiosulfonate (MTSES) caused a strong Ca(2+)-dependent stimulation of the A283C, V285C, and A286C currents. However, in contrast to the wild-type IKCa, the MTSET-stimulated A283C and A286C currents appeared to be TEA insensitive, indicating that the MTSET binding at positions 283 and 286 impaired the access of TEA to the channel pore. Three-dimensional structural data were next generated through homology modeling using the KcsA structure as template. In accordance with the SCAM results, the three-dimensional models predict that the V275, T278, and V282 residues should be lining the channel pore. However, the pore dimensions derived for the A283-A286 region cannot account for the MTSET effect on the closed A283C and A286 mutants. Our results suggest that the S6 domain extending from V275 to V282 possesses features corresponding to the inner cavity region of KcsA, and that the COOH terminus end of S6, from A283 to A286, is more flexible than predicted on the basis of the closed KcsA crystallographic structure alone. According to this model, closure by the gate should occur at a point located between the T278 and V282 residues.  相似文献   

18.
Potassium channels play fundamental roles in excitable cells. X-ray structures of bacterial potassium channels show that the pore-lining inner helices obstruct the cytoplasmic entrance to the closed channel KcsA, but diverge in widely open channels MthK and KvAP, suggesting a gating-hinge role for a conserved Gly in the inner helix. A different location of the gating hinge and a narrower open pore were proposed for voltage-gated Shaker potassium channels that have the Pro-473-Val-Pro motif. Two major observations back the proposal: cadmium ions lock mutant Val-476-Cys in the open state by bridging Cys-476 and His-486 in adjacent helices, and cadmium blocks the locked-open double mutant Val-474-Cys/Val-476-Cys by binding to Cys-474 residues. Here we used molecular modeling to show that the open Shaker should be as wide as KvAP to accommodate an open-channel blocker, correolide. We further built KvAP-, MthK-, and KcsA-based models of the Shaker mutants and Monte-Carlo-minimized them with constraints Cys-476-Cd(2+)-His-486. The latter were consistent with the KvAP-based model, causing a small-bend N-terminal to the Pro-473-Val-Pro motif. The constraints significantly distorted the MthK-based structure, making it similar to KvAP. The KcsA structure resisted the constraints. Two Cd(2+) ions easily block the locked-open KvAP-based model at Cys-474 residues, whereas constraining a single cadmium ion to four Cys-474 caused large conformational changes and electrostatic imbalance. Although mutual disposition of the voltage-sensor and pore domains in the KvAP x-ray structure is currently disputed, our results suggest that the pore-region domain retains a nativelike conformation in the crystal.  相似文献   

19.
Ruta V  MacKinnon R 《Biochemistry》2004,43(31):10071-10079
A variety of venomous animals produce small protein toxins that impair the function of voltage-dependent cation channels by affecting the motions of the voltage-sensor domains and altering the energetics of the opening of the channel. In this study, we investigate the location of the receptor for tarantula venom voltage-sensor toxins on the voltage-dependent K+ channel from Aeropyrum pernix (KvAP), an archeabacterial channel that is functionally inhibited by members of this toxin family. We show that it is possible to purify the same set of toxins from venom of the tarantula Grammostola spatulata using either the purified KvAP voltage-sensor domain or the full-length KvAP channel. The equivalence of toxin retention profiles for the two channel proteins implies that the tarantula voltage-sensor toxin receptor resides exclusively on the voltage-sensor domain and that the pore is not required for the toxin-channel interaction. We have identified and characterized the functional properties of a subset of the tarantula toxins that bind to the KvAP voltage-sensor domain. Some of these toxins, VSTX1 and GSMTX4, have been previously isolated, while others, VSTX2 and VSTX3, are new members of the tarantula voltage-sensor toxin family. Some but not all toxins that bind to the voltage-sensor domain affect voltage-dependent gating of KvAP channels in lipid membranes.  相似文献   

20.
Molecular coupling of S4 to a K(+) channel's slow inactivation gate   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The mechanism by which physiological signals regulate the conformation of molecular gates that open and close ion channels is poorly understood. Voltage clamp fluorometry was used to ask how the voltage-sensing S4 transmembrane domain is coupled to the slow inactivation gate in the pore domain of the Shaker K(+) channel. Fluorophores attached at several sites in S4 indicate that the voltage-sensing rearrangements are followed by an additional inactivation motion. Fluorophores attached at the perimeter of the pore domain indicate that the inactivation rearrangement projects from the selectivity filter out to the interface with the voltage-sensing domain. Some of the pore domain sites also sense activation, and this appears to be due to a direct interaction with S4 based on the finding that S4 comes into close enough proximity to the pore domain for a pore mutation to alter the nanoenvironment of an S4-attached fluorophore. We propose that activation produces an S4-pore domain interaction that disrupts a bond between the S4 contact site on the pore domain and the outer end of S6. Our results indicate that this bond holds the slow inactivation gate open and, therefore, we propose that this S4-induced bond disruption triggers inactivation.  相似文献   

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