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1.
We have analyzed voltage-dependent anion-selective channel (VDAC) gating on the assumption that the states occupied by the channel are determined mainly by their electrostatic energy. The voltage dependence of VDAC gating both in the presence and in the absence of a salt activity gradient was explained just by invoking electrostatic interactions. A model describing this energy in the main VDAC states has been developed. On the basis of the model, we have considered how external factors cause the redistribution of the channels among their conformational states. We propose that there is a difference in the electrostatic interaction between the voltage sensor and fixed charge within the channel when the former is located in the cis side of membrane as opposed to the trans. This could be the main cause of the shift in the probability curve. The theory describes satisfactorily the experimental data (Zizi et al., Biophys. J. 1998. 75:704-713) and explains some peculiarities of VDAC gating. The asymmetry of the probability curve was related to the apparent location of the VDAC voltage sensor in the open state. By analyzing published experimental data, we concluded that this apparent location is influenced by the diffusion potential. Also discussed is the possibility that VDAC gating at high voltage may be better described by assuming that the mobile charge consists of two parts that have to overcome different energetic barriers in the channel-closing process.  相似文献   

2.
The bacterial sodium channel, NaChBac, from Bacillus halodurans provides an excellent model to study structure-function relationships of voltage-gated ion channels. It can be expressed in mammalian cells for functional studies as well as in bacterial cultures as starting material for protein purification for fine biochemical and biophysical studies. Macroscopic functional properties of NaChBac have been described previously (Ren, D., B. Navarro, H. Xu, L. Yue, Q. Shi, and D.E. Clapham. 2001. Science. 294:2372-2375). In this study, we report gating current properties of NaChBac expressed in COS-1 cells. Upon depolarization of the membrane, gating currents appeared as upward inflections preceding the ionic currents. Gating currents were detectable at -90 mV while holding at -150 mV. Charge-voltage (Q-V) curves showed sigmoidal dependence on voltage with gating charge saturating at -10 mV. Charge movement was shifted by -22 mV relative to the conductance-voltage curve, indicating the presence of more than one closed state. Consistent with this was the Cole-Moore shift of 533 micros observed for a change in preconditioning voltage from -160 to -80 mV. The total gating charge was estimated to be 16 elementary charges per channel. Charge immobilization caused by prolonged depolarization was also observed; Q-V curves were shifted by approximately -60 mV to hyperpolarized potentials when cells were held at 0 mV. The kinetic properties of NaChBac were simulated by simultaneous fit of sodium currents at various voltages to a sequential kinetic model. Gating current kinetics predicted from ionic current experiments resembled the experimental data, indicating that gating currents are coupled to activation of NaChBac and confirming the assertion that this channel undergoes several transitions between closed states before channel opening. The results indicate that NaChBac has several closed states with voltage-dependent transitions between them realized by translocation of gating charge that causes activation of the channel.  相似文献   

3.
Streaming potentials arising across large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels incorporated into planar lipid bilayers were measured. Ca2+-activated channels obtained either from skeletal muscle or from smooth muscle membranes were used. Streaming potentials were extracted from the current-voltage relationship for the open channel obtained in the presence of an osmotic gradient. The osmotic gradient was established by adding glucose to one side of the membrane. At 300 mM KCl, the average streaming potential was 0.72 mV/osmol per kg for t-tubule channels and 0.83 mV/osmol per kg for smooth muscle channels. Streaming potential values depend on KCl concentration, they decrease as KCl concentration increases, and the value obtained by extrapolation to zero KCl concentration is 0.85 mV/osmol per kg. Assuming that water and ions cannot pass each other, at least in a region of the channel, the streaming potential values obtained indicate that this region contains a minimum of two and a maximum of four water molecules. It is concluded that the channel has a narrow region with a length of 0.6-1.2 nm.  相似文献   

4.
The voltage-dependent anion channel (VDAC) in the outer membrane of mitochondria serves an essential role in the transport of metabolites and electrolytes between the cell matrix and mitochondria. To examine its structure, dynamics, and the mechanisms underlying its electrophysiological properties, we performed a total of 1.77 μs molecular dynamics simulations of human VDAC isoform 1 in DOPE/DOPC mixed bilayers in 1 M KCl solution with transmembrane potentials of 0, ±25, ±50, ±75, and ±100 mV. The calculated conductance and ion selectivity are in good agreement with the experimental measurements. In addition, ion density distributions inside the channel reveal possible pathways for different ion species. Based on these observations, a mechanism underlying the anion selectivity is proposed; both ion species are transported across the channel, but the rate for K+ is smaller than that for Cl because of the attractive interactions between K+ and residues on the channel wall. This difference leads to the anion selectivity of VDAC.  相似文献   

5.
Yeast mitoplasts (mitochondria with the outer membrane stripped away) exhibit multiple conductance channel activity (MCC) in patch-clamp experiments that is very similar to the activity previously described in mammalian mitoplasts. The possible involvement of the voltage-dependent anion-selective channel (VDAC) of the outer membrane in MCC activity was explored by comparing the channel activity in wild-type yeast mitoplasts with that of a VDAC-deletion mutant. The channel activity recorded from the mutant is essentially the same as that of the wild-type in the voltage range of -40 to 30 mV. These observations indicate that VDAC is not required for MCC activity. Interestingly, the channel activity of the VDAC-less yeast mitoplasts exhibits altered gating properties at transmembrane potentials above and below this range. We conclude that the deletion of VDAC somehow results in a modification of MCC's voltage dependence. In fact, the voltage profile recorded from the VDAC-less mutant resembles that of VDAC.  相似文献   

6.
The VDAC channel of the mitochondrial outer membrane is voltage-gated like the larger, more complex voltage-gated channels of the plasma membrane. However, VDAC is a low molecular weight (30 kDa), abundant protein, which is readily purified and reconstituted, making it an ideal system for analyzing the molecular basis for ion selectivity and voltage-gating. We have probed the VDAC channel by subjecting the cloned yeast (S. cerevisiae) VDAC gene to site-directed mutagenesis and introducing the resulting mutant channels into planar bilayers to detect the effects of specific sequence changes on channel properties. This approach has allowed us to formulate and test a model of the open state structure of the VDAC channel. Now we have applied the same approach to analyzing the structure of the channel's low-conducting "closed state" (essentially closed to important metabolites). We have identified protein domains forming the wall of the closed conformation and domains that seem to be removed from the wall of the pore during channel closure. The latter can explain the reduction in pore diameter and volume and the dramatically altered channel selectivity resulting from the channel closure. This process would make a natural coupling between motion of the sensor and channel gating.  相似文献   

7.
Charge selectivity in ion channel proteins is not fully understood. We have studied charge selectivity in a simple model system without charged groups, in which an amphiphilic helical peptide, Ac-(Leu-Ser-Ser-Leu-Leu-Ser-Leu)3-CONH2, forms ion channels across an uncharged phospholipid membrane. We find these channels to conduct both K+ and Cl-, with a permeability ratio (based on reversal potentials) that depends on the direction of the KCl concentration gradient across the membrane. The channel shows high selectivity for K+ when [KCl] is lowered on the side of the membrane that is held at a positive potential (the putative C-terminal side), but only modest K+ selectivity when [KCl] is lowered on the opposite side (the putative N-terminal side). Neither a simple Nernst-Planck electrodiffusion model including screening of the helix dipole potential, nor a multi-ion, state transition model allowing simultaneous cation and anion occupancy of the channel can satisfactorily fit the current-voltage curves over the full range of experimental conditions. However, the C-side/N-side dilution asymmetry in reversal potentials can be simulated with either type of model.  相似文献   

8.
A large-conductance, Ca2+-activated K+ channel was identified and characterized in embryonic chick hepatocytes using the patch-electrode voltage-clamp technique. The channel conductance was 213 pS in excised patches bathed in symmetrical 145 mM KCl and 1 mM Ca2+. Current-voltage relationships were linear with high K+ on both sides of the membrane but showed constant field rectification as the K+ gradient was increased. The reversal potential shifted 58 mV per 10-fold change in the ratio of external to internal K+. Channel openings occurred at potentials higher than +50 mV in cell-attached patches. The open probability × voltage relationship shifted to more negative potentials in excised, inside-out patches exposed to a solution containing high Ca2+. The voltage sensitivity of the channel was not significantly affected by changes in internal Ca2+ concentration. Conversely, channel gating, reflected in the half-activation potential, shifted 118 mV per 10-fold change in internal Ca2+ at concentrations less than ∼2 μM, although at higher Ca2+, this parameter was Ca2+ insensitive. Channel open probability in cell-attached patches increased significantly following exposure of the cells to either the Ca2+ ionophore A-23187 or L-alanine, a cell-volume modulator. Channel density increased with time spent in culture from no observations in 10-hr cells, through 13 and 80% of patches in 24-and 48-hr cultured cells, respectively. The implications of delayed functional expression for ion channel studies in acutely dissociated cells is discussed. J. Cell. Physiol. 171:87–94, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Detergent-free rat brain outer mitochondrial membranes were incorporated in planar lipid bilayers in the presence of an osmotic gradient, and studied at high (1 m KCl) and low (150 mm KCl) ionic strength solutions. By comparison, the main outer mitochondrial membrane protein, VDAC, extracted from rat liver with Triton X-100, was also studied in 150 mm KCl. In 1 m KCl, brain outer membranes gave rise to electrical patterns which resembled very closely those widely described for detergent-extracted VDAC, with transitions to several subconducting states upon increase of the potential difference, and sensitivity to polyanion. The potential dependence of the conductance of the outer membrane, however, was steeper and the extent of closure higher than that observed previously for rat brain VDAC. In 150 mm KCl, bilayers containing only one channel had a conductance of 700 ± 23 pS for rat brain outer membranes, and 890 ± 29 pS for rat liver VDAC. Use of a fast time resolution setup allowed demonstration of open-close transitions in the millisecond range, which were independent of the salt concentration and of the protein origin. We also found that a potential difference higher than approx. ± 60 mV induced an almost irreversible decrease of the single channel conductance to few percentages of the full open state and a change in the ionic selectivity. These results show that the behavior of the outer mitochondrial membrane in planar bilayers is close to that detected with the patch clamp (Moran et al., 1992, Eur. Biophys. J. 20:311–319).The neurotoxicological action of aluminum was studied in single outer membrane channels from rat brain mitochondria. We found that m concentrations of Al Cl3 and aluminum lactate decreased the conductance by about 50%, when the applied potential difference was positive relative to the side of the metal addition.The authors thank Dr. O. Moran for helpful discussions, Dr. M. Colombini for a sample of polyanion, and the Sharing Company for financial support to Dr. T. M. This work was partly supported by funds from the Ministero dell' Universitá e della Ricerca Scientifica e Tecnologica of Italy.  相似文献   

10.
The voltage-dependent gating of single, batrachotoxin-activated Na channels from rat brain was studied in planar lipid bilayers composed of negatively charged or neutral phospholipids. The relationship between the probability of finding the Na channel in the open state and the membrane potential (Po vs. Vm) was determined in symmetrical NaCl, both in the absence of free Ca2+ and after the addition of Ca2+ to the extracellular side of the channel, the intracellular side, or both. In the absence of Ca2+, neither the midpoint (V0.5) of the Po vs. Vm relation, nor the steepness of the gating curve, was affected by the charge on the bilayer lipid. The addition of 7.5 mM Ca2+ to the external side caused a depolarizing shift in V0.5. This depolarizing shift was approximately 17 mV in neutral bilayers and approximately 25 mV in negatively charged bilayers. The addition of the same concentration of Ca2+ to only the intracellular side caused hyperpolarizing shifts in V0.5 of approximately 7 mV (neutral bilayers) and approximately 14 mV (negatively charged bilayers). The symmetrical addition of Ca2+ caused a small depolarizing shift in Po vs. Vm. We conclude that: (a) the Na channel protein possesses negatively charged groups on both its inner and outer surfaces. Charges on both surfaces affect channel gating but those on the outer surface exert a stronger influence. (b) Negative surface charges on the membrane phospholipid are close enough to the channel's gating machinery to substantially affect its operation. Charges on the inner and outer surfaces of the membrane lipid affect gating symmetrically. (c) Effects on steady-state Na channel activation are consistent with a simple superposition of contributions to the local electrostatic potential from charges on the channel protein and the membrane lipid.  相似文献   

11.
Evidence is accumulating that lipids play important roles in permeabilization of the mitochondria outer membrane (MOM) at the early stage of apoptosis. Lamellar phosphatidylcholine (PC) and nonlamellar phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) lipids are the major membrane components of the MOM. Cardiolipin (CL), the characteristic lipid from the mitochondrial inner membrane, is another nonlamellar lipid recently shown to play a role in MOM permeabilization. We investigate the effect of these three key lipids on the gating properties of the voltage-dependent anion channel (VDAC), the major channel in MOM. We find that PE induces voltage asymmetry in VDAC current-voltage characteristics by promoting channel closure at cis negative applied potentials. Significant asymmetry is also induced by CL. The observed differences in VDAC behavior in PC and PE membranes cannot be explained by differences in the insertion orientation of VDAC in these membranes. Rather, it is clear that the two nonlamellar lipids affect VDAC gating. Using gramicidin A channels as a tool to probe bilayer mechanics, we show that VDAC channels are much more sensitive to the presence of CL than could be expected from the experiments with gramicidin channels. We suggest that this is due to the preferential insertion of VDAC into CL-rich domains. We propose that the specific lipid composition of the mitochondria outer membrane and/or of contact sites might influence MOM permeability by regulating VDAC gating.  相似文献   

12.
The single-channel electrophysiological properties of the voltage-dependent anion channel (VDAC) of mitochondria from rat liver have been investigated under normal and phosphorylated (with protein kinase A) conditions. Experimental observations show that phosphorylation does not affect the current level and the opening probability in the positive clamping potentials, but leads to lowering of current magnitude and opening probability in the negative clamping potentials. The opening probability versus voltage (V) plot for native VDAC fits a Gaussian function symmetric around V = 0, whereas the same for phosphorylated VDAC fits a linear combination of two Gaussian functions. This indicates that there are two gating modes of VDAC; the negative voltage sensor (gate) undergoes modification due to phosphorylation.  相似文献   

13.
The voltage-dependent, anion-selective mitochondrial channel, VDAC, undergoes two different conformational changes from the open to a closed state under positive and negative applied electric fields. Micromolar quantities of aluminum hydroxide and other metal trihydroxides have recently been shown to be able to inhibit this voltage-dependent closure (Dill et al. (1987) J. Membr. Biol. 99, 187-196; Zhang and Colombini (1989) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 991, 68-78). It was suggested that the inhibition results from the neutralization of the positively charged voltage sensors by the metal species. In the present study, the dynamics of the metal-binding site accompanying channel closure was investigated by adding In(OH)3 to only one side of the membrane and examining its effect on the channel's gating processes. Indium added to open channels inhibited channel closure only when the metal-containing side was on the lower potential side of the applied field. If indium was added only to the higher-potential side, the channels closed and tended to remain closed after the field was abolished. The addition of metal hydroxide after closing the channels with a negative potential on the metal side did not result in channel re-opening as would be expected for sensor neutralization. Inhibition occurred immediately, however, if the channels were first allowed to open briefly. The closed-state selectivity seemed to be very similar in the absence or presence of the metal, indicating that the metal-binding sites are not located within the pore of the channel in the closed conformation. The results are consistent with a voltage-dependent translocation across the membrane of each of two metal-binding sites on VDAC. This translocation is tightly coupled with channel opening and closing.  相似文献   

14.
We have studied the admittance of the membrane of squid giant axon under voltage clamp in the absence of ionic conductances in the range of 0-12 kHz for membrane potentials (V) between --130 and 70 mV. The admittance was measured at various holding potentials (HP) or 155 ms after pulsing from a given holding potential. Standard P/4 procedure was used to study gating currents in the same axons. We found that the membrane capacity Cm (omega) is voltage as well as frequency dependent. For any given V, the voltage-dependent part of the membrane capacitance has a maximum as the frequency approaches zero and requires at least a two-time constant equivalent circuit to be described. When the holding potential is varied, the voltage-dependent capacitance follows a bell- shaped curve with a maximum change of 0.15 muF/cm2 at about --60 mV. With the pulse method, the maximum is at --40 mV for HP = --70 and it shifts to --70 mV for HP = 0. The shift in the maximum of the voltage- dependent capacitance is consistent with the shift in the charge (Q) vs. V curve observed in our experiments with regular P/4 procedure when the HP is varied. Our data can be explained qualitatively by a four- state model for the sodium channel gating, where a charged particle can move within the field and interact with another particle not affected by the field.  相似文献   

15.
Gating currents were measured by subtracting the linear component of the capacitative current recorded at very positive or very negative potentials. When the membrane is depolarized for a few minutes, repolarized to the usual holding potential (HP) of --70 mV for 1 ms, and then pulsed to 0 mV, the charge transferred in 2--4 ms is approximately 50% of that which was transferred during the same pulse holding at --70 mV. This charge decrease, called slow inactivation of the gating current, was found to be consistent with a shift of the charge vs. potential (Q-V) curve to more hyperpolarized potentials. When the HP is 0 mV, the total charge available to move is the same as the total charge available when the HP is --70 mV. The time constants of the fast component of the ON gating current are smaller at depolarized holding potentials than at --70 mV. When the HP is --70 mV and a prepulse of 50 ms duration is given to 0 mV, the Q-V curve is also shifted to more hyperpolarized potentials (charge immobilization), but the effect is not as pronounced as the one obtained by holding at 0 mV. When the HP is 0 mV, a prepulse to --70 mV for 50 ms partially shifts back the Q-V curve, indicating that fast inactivation of the gating charge may be recovered in the presence of slow inactivation. A physical model consisting of a gating particle that interacts with a fast inactivating particle, and a slow inactivating particle, reproduces most of the experimental results.  相似文献   

16.
VDAC forms the major pathway for metabolites across the mitochondrial outer membrane. The regulation of the gating of VDAC channels is an effective way to control the flow of metabolites into and out of mitochondria. Here we present evidence that actin can modulate the gating process of Neurospora crassa VDAC reconstituted into membranes made with phosphatidylcholine. An actin concentration as low as 50 nm caused the VDAC-mediated membrane conductance to drop by as much as 85% at elevated membrane potentials. Actin's effect could be quickly reversed by adding pronase to digest the protein. α-Actin, from mammalian muscle, has a stronger effect than β- and γ-actin from human platelets. The monomeric form of actin, G-actin, is effective. Stabilization of the fibrous form, F-actin, with the mushroom toxin, phalloidin, blocks the effect of actin on VDAC, indicating that F-actin might be ineffective. Cytochalasin B did not interfere with the ability of actin to favor VDAC closure. DNase-I did effectively block actin's effect on VDAC, and VDAC decreased actin's inhibitory effect on DNase-I activity, indicating that N. crassa VDAC competes with DNase-I for the same binding site on actin. The actin-VDAC interaction might be a mechanism by which actin regulates energy metabolism. Received: 28 August 2000/Revised: 1 December 2000  相似文献   

17.
Potassium ion accumulation in the periaxonal space between squid axonal membrane and the Schwann cell surrounding the axon slows the rate of potassium channel closing to a degree that is consistent with the effect on channel closing of an equivalent change in the bulk external potassium concentration. The alteration of channel gating is independent of membrane potential, V, for V less than or equal to -60 mV, which suggests that the effect is mediated at a site on the outer surface of the membrane, rather than a site within the channel.  相似文献   

18.
A porin preparation from Escherichia coli 0111:B4 consisting of Omp F and Omp C (with Omp F in excess) was purified by salt extraction procedures and investigated in bilayer lipid membranes formed according to the Montal-Mueller technique. The porin preparation was added to the KCl electrolyte compartment of the Montal-Mueller cell which was connected to the voltage source. As the porin incorporated into the membrane, asymmetric, voltage-gated ion channels were formed. Transmembrane voltages greater than +50 mV (measured with respect to the side of porin addition) caused channel closing, while negative voltages, on the other hand, had no effect on channel behaviour but did increase the rate of porin incorporation at higher voltages. With porin added to both compartments voltage gating no longer occurred. Single-channel conductances corresponded to effective pore diameters of 1.5 nm for opening events and 1.18 nm for channel closing events. The number of charges involved in gating was approximately 2.  相似文献   

19.
Since secretion of electrolytes may be regulated by membrane potential difference, ion channels were studied using patchclamp technique. We have identified, in cell-attached configuration, inward-rectifying channels: the zero-current potential corresponded to the K+ equilibrium potential calculated from intracellular K+ activity. Using inside-out configuration and symmetric 145 mM KCl salines, i/V curve was linear, channel conductance was about 170 pS and the reversal potential 0 mV. The channels were selective for K+ over Na+, N-methylglucamine and anions and were activated by membrane depolarization.  相似文献   

20.
Missense mutations in the pore-forming human alpha(1A) subunit of neuronal P/Q-type Ca(2+) channels are associated with familial hemiplegic migraine. We studied the functional consequences on P/Q-type Ca(2+) channel function of three recently identified mutations, R583Q, D715E, and V1457L after introduction into rabbit alpha(1A) and expression in Xenopus laevis oocytes. The potential for half-maximal channel activation of Ba(2+) inward currents was shifted by > 9 mV to more negative potentials in all three mutants. The potential for half-maximal channel inactivation was shifted by > 7 mV in the same direction in R583Q and D715E. Biexponential current inactivation during 3-s test pulses was significantly faster in D715E and slower in V1457L than in wild type. Mutations R583Q and V1457L delayed the time course of recovery from channel inactivation. The decrease of peak current through R583Q (30.2%) and D715E (30. 1%) but not V1457L (18.7%) was more pronounced during 1-Hz trains of 15 100-ms pulses than in wild type (18.2%). Our data demonstrate that the mutations R583Q, D715E, and V1457L, like the previously reported mutations T666M, V714A, and I1819L, affect P/Q-type Ca(2+) channel gating. We therefore propose that altered channel gating represents a common pathophysiological mechanism in familial hemiplegic migraine.  相似文献   

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