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Single amino acids set apparent temperature thresholds for heat-evoked activation of mosquito transient receptor potential channel TRPA1
Authors:Thi Hong Dung Nguyen  Stella Chapman  Makiko Kashio  Claire Saito  Tatjana Strom  Mio Yasui  Makoto Tominaga
Institution:1.Division of Cell Signaling, National Institute for Physiological Sciences, National Institutes of Natural Sciences, Okazaki, Japan;2.Thermal Biology Group, Exploratory Research Center on Life and Living Systems (ExCELLS), National Institutes of Natural Sciences, Okazaki, Japan;3.Institute for Biology, Humboldt University of Berlin, Berlin, Germany;4.Nagoya City University Medicine School, Nagoya, Japan
Abstract:Animals detect heat using thermosensitive transient receptor potential (TRP) channels. In insects, these include TRP ankyrin 1 (TRPA1), which in mosquitoes is crucial for noxious heat avoidance and thus is an appealing pest control target. However, the molecular basis for heat-evoked activation has not been fully elucidated, impeding both studies of the molecular evolution of temperature sensitivity and rational design of inhibitors. In TRPA1 and other thermosensitive TRPs, the N-terminal cytoplasmic ankyrin repeat (AR) domain has been suggested to participate in heat-evoked activation, but the lack of a structure containing the full AR domain has hindered our mechanistic understanding of its role. Here, we focused on elucidating the structural basis of apparent temperature threshold determination by taking advantage of two closely related mosquito TRPA1s from Aedes aegypti and Culex pipiens pallens with 86.9% protein sequence identity but a 10 °C difference in apparent temperature threshold. We identified two positions in the N-terminal cytoplasmic AR domain of these proteins, E417 (A. aegypti)/Q414 (C. pipiens) and R459 (A. aegypti)/Q456 (C. pipiens), at which a single exchange of amino acid identity was sufficient to change apparent thresholds by 5 to 7 °C. We further found that the role of these positions is conserved in TRPA1 of a third related species, Anopheles stephensi. Our results suggest a structural basis for temperature threshold determination as well as for the evolutionary adaptation of mosquito TRPA1 to the wide range of climates inhabited by mosquitoes.
Keywords:transient receptor potential channels  insect  physiology  protein chimera  mutagenesis  electrophysiology
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