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On the Structural Basis for Size-selective Permeation of Organic Cations through the Voltage-gated Sodium Channel : Effect of Alanine Mutations at the DEKA Locus on Selectivity, Inhibition by Ca(2+) and H(+), and Molecular Sieving

Recent evidence indicates that ionic selectivity in voltage-gated Na(+) channels is mediated by a small number of residues in P-region segments that link transmembrane elements S5 and S6 in each of four homologous domains denoted I, II, III, and IV. Important determinants for this function appear to...

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Autores principales: Sun, Ye-Ming, Favre, Isabelle, Schild, Laurent, Moczydlowski, Edward
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1997
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2229404/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9382897
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author Sun, Ye-Ming
Favre, Isabelle
Schild, Laurent
Moczydlowski, Edward
author_facet Sun, Ye-Ming
Favre, Isabelle
Schild, Laurent
Moczydlowski, Edward
author_sort Sun, Ye-Ming
collection PubMed
description Recent evidence indicates that ionic selectivity in voltage-gated Na(+) channels is mediated by a small number of residues in P-region segments that link transmembrane elements S5 and S6 in each of four homologous domains denoted I, II, III, and IV. Important determinants for this function appear to be a set of conserved charged residues in the first three homologous domains, Asp(I), Glu(II), and Lys(III), located in a region of the pore called the DEKA locus. In this study, we examined several Ala-substitution mutations of these residues for alterations in ionic selectivity, inhibition of macroscopic current by external Ca(2+) and H(+), and molecular sieving behavior using a series of organic cations ranging in size from ammonium to tetraethylammonium. Whole-cell recording of wild-type and mutant channels of the rat muscle μ1 Na(+) channel stably expressed in HEK293 cells was used to compare macroscopic current–voltage behavior in the presence of various external cations and an intracellular reference solution containing Cs(+) and very low Ca(2+). In particular, we tested the hypothesis that the Lys residue in domain III of the DEKA locus is responsible for restricting the permeation of large organic cations. Mutation of Lys(III) to Ala largely eliminated selectivity among the group IA monovalent alkali cations (Li(+), Na(+), K(+), Rb(+), Cs(+)) and permitted inward current of group IIA divalent cations (Mg(2+), Ca(2+), Sr(2+), Ba(2+)). This same mutation also resulted in the acquisition of permeability to many large organic cations such as methylammonium, tetramethylammonium, and tetraethylammonium, all of which are impermeant in the native channel. The results lead to the conclusion that charged residues of the DEKA locus play an important role in molecular sieving behavior of the Na(+) channel pore, a function that has been previously attributed to a hypothetical region of the channel called the “selectivity filter.” A detailed examination of individual contributions of the Asp(I), Glu(II), and Lys(III) residues and the dependence on molecular size suggests that relative permeability of organic cations is a complex function of the size, charge, and polarity of these residues and cation substrates. As judged by effects on macroscopic conductance, charged residues of the DEKA locus also appear to play a role in the mechanisms of block by external Ca(2+) and H(+), but are not essential for the positive shift in activation voltage that is produced by these ions.
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spelling pubmed-22294042008-04-22 On the Structural Basis for Size-selective Permeation of Organic Cations through the Voltage-gated Sodium Channel : Effect of Alanine Mutations at the DEKA Locus on Selectivity, Inhibition by Ca(2+) and H(+), and Molecular Sieving Sun, Ye-Ming Favre, Isabelle Schild, Laurent Moczydlowski, Edward J Gen Physiol Article Recent evidence indicates that ionic selectivity in voltage-gated Na(+) channels is mediated by a small number of residues in P-region segments that link transmembrane elements S5 and S6 in each of four homologous domains denoted I, II, III, and IV. Important determinants for this function appear to be a set of conserved charged residues in the first three homologous domains, Asp(I), Glu(II), and Lys(III), located in a region of the pore called the DEKA locus. In this study, we examined several Ala-substitution mutations of these residues for alterations in ionic selectivity, inhibition of macroscopic current by external Ca(2+) and H(+), and molecular sieving behavior using a series of organic cations ranging in size from ammonium to tetraethylammonium. Whole-cell recording of wild-type and mutant channels of the rat muscle μ1 Na(+) channel stably expressed in HEK293 cells was used to compare macroscopic current–voltage behavior in the presence of various external cations and an intracellular reference solution containing Cs(+) and very low Ca(2+). In particular, we tested the hypothesis that the Lys residue in domain III of the DEKA locus is responsible for restricting the permeation of large organic cations. Mutation of Lys(III) to Ala largely eliminated selectivity among the group IA monovalent alkali cations (Li(+), Na(+), K(+), Rb(+), Cs(+)) and permitted inward current of group IIA divalent cations (Mg(2+), Ca(2+), Sr(2+), Ba(2+)). This same mutation also resulted in the acquisition of permeability to many large organic cations such as methylammonium, tetramethylammonium, and tetraethylammonium, all of which are impermeant in the native channel. The results lead to the conclusion that charged residues of the DEKA locus play an important role in molecular sieving behavior of the Na(+) channel pore, a function that has been previously attributed to a hypothetical region of the channel called the “selectivity filter.” A detailed examination of individual contributions of the Asp(I), Glu(II), and Lys(III) residues and the dependence on molecular size suggests that relative permeability of organic cations is a complex function of the size, charge, and polarity of these residues and cation substrates. As judged by effects on macroscopic conductance, charged residues of the DEKA locus also appear to play a role in the mechanisms of block by external Ca(2+) and H(+), but are not essential for the positive shift in activation voltage that is produced by these ions. The Rockefeller University Press 1997-12-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2229404/ /pubmed/9382897 Text en This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Sun, Ye-Ming
Favre, Isabelle
Schild, Laurent
Moczydlowski, Edward
On the Structural Basis for Size-selective Permeation of Organic Cations through the Voltage-gated Sodium Channel : Effect of Alanine Mutations at the DEKA Locus on Selectivity, Inhibition by Ca(2+) and H(+), and Molecular Sieving
title On the Structural Basis for Size-selective Permeation of Organic Cations through the Voltage-gated Sodium Channel : Effect of Alanine Mutations at the DEKA Locus on Selectivity, Inhibition by Ca(2+) and H(+), and Molecular Sieving
title_full On the Structural Basis for Size-selective Permeation of Organic Cations through the Voltage-gated Sodium Channel : Effect of Alanine Mutations at the DEKA Locus on Selectivity, Inhibition by Ca(2+) and H(+), and Molecular Sieving
title_fullStr On the Structural Basis for Size-selective Permeation of Organic Cations through the Voltage-gated Sodium Channel : Effect of Alanine Mutations at the DEKA Locus on Selectivity, Inhibition by Ca(2+) and H(+), and Molecular Sieving
title_full_unstemmed On the Structural Basis for Size-selective Permeation of Organic Cations through the Voltage-gated Sodium Channel : Effect of Alanine Mutations at the DEKA Locus on Selectivity, Inhibition by Ca(2+) and H(+), and Molecular Sieving
title_short On the Structural Basis for Size-selective Permeation of Organic Cations through the Voltage-gated Sodium Channel : Effect of Alanine Mutations at the DEKA Locus on Selectivity, Inhibition by Ca(2+) and H(+), and Molecular Sieving
title_sort on the structural basis for size-selective permeation of organic cations through the voltage-gated sodium channel : effect of alanine mutations at the deka locus on selectivity, inhibition by ca(2+) and h(+), and molecular sieving
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2229404/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9382897
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