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Unique Mechanism of the Interaction between Honey Bee Toxin TPN(Q) and rKir1.1 Potassium Channel Explored by Computational Simulations: Insights into the Relative Insensitivity of Channel towards Animal Toxins

BACKGROUND: The 21-residue compact tertiapin-Q (TPN(Q)) toxin, a derivative of honey bee toxin tertiapin (TPN), is a potent blocker of inward-rectifier K(+) channel subtype, rat Kir1.1 (rKir1.1) channel, and their interaction mechanism remains unclear. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Based on the flexible featu...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hu, Jun, Qiu, Su, Yang, Fan, Cao, Zhijian, Li, Wenxin, Wu, Yingliang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3707903/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23874410
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0067213
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author Hu, Jun
Qiu, Su
Yang, Fan
Cao, Zhijian
Li, Wenxin
Wu, Yingliang
author_facet Hu, Jun
Qiu, Su
Yang, Fan
Cao, Zhijian
Li, Wenxin
Wu, Yingliang
author_sort Hu, Jun
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The 21-residue compact tertiapin-Q (TPN(Q)) toxin, a derivative of honey bee toxin tertiapin (TPN), is a potent blocker of inward-rectifier K(+) channel subtype, rat Kir1.1 (rKir1.1) channel, and their interaction mechanism remains unclear. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Based on the flexible feature of potassium channel turrets, a good starting rKir1.1 channel structure was modeled for the accessibility of rKir1.1 channel turrets to TPN(Q) toxin. In combination with experimental alanine scanning mutagenesis data, computational approaches were further used to obtain a reasonable TPN(Q) toxin-rKir1.1 channel complex structure, which was completely different from the known binding modes between animal toxins and potassium channels. TPN(Q) toxin mainly adopted its helical domain as the channel-interacting surface together with His12 as the pore-blocking residue. The important Gln13 residue mainly contacted channel residues near the selectivity filter, and Lys20 residue was surrounded by a polar “groove” formed by Arg118, Thr119, Glu123, and Asn124 in the channel turret. On the other hand, four turrets of rKir1.1 channel gathered to form a narrow pore entryway for TPN(Q) toxin recognition. The Phe146 and Phe148 residues in the channel pore region formed strong hydrophobic protrusions, and produced dominant nonpolar interactions with toxin residues. These specific structure features of rKir1.1 channel vestibule well matched the binding of potent TPN(Q) toxin, and likely restricted the binding of the classical animal toxins. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The TPN(Q) toxin-rKir1.1 channel complex structure not only revealed their unique interaction mechanism, but also would highlight the diverse animal toxin-potassium channel interactions, and elucidate the relative insensitivity of rKir1.1 channel towards animal toxins.
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spelling pubmed-37079032013-07-19 Unique Mechanism of the Interaction between Honey Bee Toxin TPN(Q) and rKir1.1 Potassium Channel Explored by Computational Simulations: Insights into the Relative Insensitivity of Channel towards Animal Toxins Hu, Jun Qiu, Su Yang, Fan Cao, Zhijian Li, Wenxin Wu, Yingliang PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: The 21-residue compact tertiapin-Q (TPN(Q)) toxin, a derivative of honey bee toxin tertiapin (TPN), is a potent blocker of inward-rectifier K(+) channel subtype, rat Kir1.1 (rKir1.1) channel, and their interaction mechanism remains unclear. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Based on the flexible feature of potassium channel turrets, a good starting rKir1.1 channel structure was modeled for the accessibility of rKir1.1 channel turrets to TPN(Q) toxin. In combination with experimental alanine scanning mutagenesis data, computational approaches were further used to obtain a reasonable TPN(Q) toxin-rKir1.1 channel complex structure, which was completely different from the known binding modes between animal toxins and potassium channels. TPN(Q) toxin mainly adopted its helical domain as the channel-interacting surface together with His12 as the pore-blocking residue. The important Gln13 residue mainly contacted channel residues near the selectivity filter, and Lys20 residue was surrounded by a polar “groove” formed by Arg118, Thr119, Glu123, and Asn124 in the channel turret. On the other hand, four turrets of rKir1.1 channel gathered to form a narrow pore entryway for TPN(Q) toxin recognition. The Phe146 and Phe148 residues in the channel pore region formed strong hydrophobic protrusions, and produced dominant nonpolar interactions with toxin residues. These specific structure features of rKir1.1 channel vestibule well matched the binding of potent TPN(Q) toxin, and likely restricted the binding of the classical animal toxins. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The TPN(Q) toxin-rKir1.1 channel complex structure not only revealed their unique interaction mechanism, but also would highlight the diverse animal toxin-potassium channel interactions, and elucidate the relative insensitivity of rKir1.1 channel towards animal toxins. Public Library of Science 2013-07-10 /pmc/articles/PMC3707903/ /pubmed/23874410 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0067213 Text en © 2013 Hu et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Hu, Jun
Qiu, Su
Yang, Fan
Cao, Zhijian
Li, Wenxin
Wu, Yingliang
Unique Mechanism of the Interaction between Honey Bee Toxin TPN(Q) and rKir1.1 Potassium Channel Explored by Computational Simulations: Insights into the Relative Insensitivity of Channel towards Animal Toxins
title Unique Mechanism of the Interaction between Honey Bee Toxin TPN(Q) and rKir1.1 Potassium Channel Explored by Computational Simulations: Insights into the Relative Insensitivity of Channel towards Animal Toxins
title_full Unique Mechanism of the Interaction between Honey Bee Toxin TPN(Q) and rKir1.1 Potassium Channel Explored by Computational Simulations: Insights into the Relative Insensitivity of Channel towards Animal Toxins
title_fullStr Unique Mechanism of the Interaction between Honey Bee Toxin TPN(Q) and rKir1.1 Potassium Channel Explored by Computational Simulations: Insights into the Relative Insensitivity of Channel towards Animal Toxins
title_full_unstemmed Unique Mechanism of the Interaction between Honey Bee Toxin TPN(Q) and rKir1.1 Potassium Channel Explored by Computational Simulations: Insights into the Relative Insensitivity of Channel towards Animal Toxins
title_short Unique Mechanism of the Interaction between Honey Bee Toxin TPN(Q) and rKir1.1 Potassium Channel Explored by Computational Simulations: Insights into the Relative Insensitivity of Channel towards Animal Toxins
title_sort unique mechanism of the interaction between honey bee toxin tpn(q) and rkir1.1 potassium channel explored by computational simulations: insights into the relative insensitivity of channel towards animal toxins
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3707903/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23874410
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0067213
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