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Structural Characteristics of the Redox-sensing Coiled Coil in the Voltage-gated H+ Channel
Authors:Yuichiro Fujiwara  Kohei Takeshita  Atsushi Nakagawa  Yasushi Okamura
Institution:From the Department of Physiology, Graduate School of Medicine.;§Research Center for State-of-the-Art Functional Protein Analysis, Institute for Protein Research, and ;Graduate School of Frontier Biosciences, Osaka University, Osaka 565-0871, Japan
Abstract:Oxidation is an important biochemical defense mechanism, but it also elicits toxicity; therefore, oxidation must be under strict control. In phagocytotic events in neutrophils, the voltage-gated H+ (Hv) channel is a key regulator of the production of reactive oxygen species against invading bacteria. The cytoplasmic domain of the Hv channel forms a dimeric coiled coil underpinning a dimerized functional unit. Importantly, in the alignment of the coiled-coil core, a conserved cysteine residue forms a potential intersubunit disulfide bond. In this study, we solved the crystal structures of the coiled-coil domain in reduced, oxidized, and mutated (Cys → Ser) states. The crystal structures indicate that a pair of Cys residues forms an intersubunit disulfide bond dependent on the redox conditions. CD spectroscopy revealed that the disulfide bond increases the thermal stability of the coiled-coil protein. We also reveal that two thiol modifier molecules are able to bind to Cys in a redox-dependent manner without disruption of the dimeric coiled-coil assembly. Thus, the biochemical properties of the cytoplasmic coiled-coil domain in the Hv channel depend on the redox condition, which may play a role in redox sensing in the phagosome.
Keywords:Biosensors  Ion Channels  Oxidation-Reduction  Protein Structure  Proton Transport  Coiled Coil  Proton Channel  Ion Channel Structure-Function  Ion Channel Biophysics  Redox
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